6 January 2018

Inequality in the 21st century

Inequality in the 21st century
It is time for a radical change, one that replaces traditional anti-monopoly laws with legislation mandating a wider dispersal of shareholding within each company
At the end of a low and dishonest year, reminiscent of the “low, dishonest decade” about which W.H. Auden wrote in his poem September 1, 1939, the world’s “clever hopes” are giving way to recognition that many severe problems must be tackled. And, among the severest, with the gravest long-term and even existential implications, is economic inequality.
The alarming level of economic inequality globally has been well documented by prominent economists, including Thomas Piketty, François Bourguignon, Branko Milanović and Joseph E. Stiglitz, and well-known institutions, including Oxfam and the World Bank. And it is obvious even from a casual stroll through the streets of New York, New Delhi, Beijing or Berlin.
Voices on the right often claim that this inequality is not only justifiable, but also appropriate: Wealth is a just reward for hard work, while poverty is an earned punishment for laziness. This is a myth. The reality is that the poor, more often than not, must work extremely hard, often in difficult conditions, just to survive.
Moreover, if a wealthy person does have a particularly strong work ethic, it is likely attributable not just to their genetic predisposition, but also to their upbringing, including whatever privileges, values and opportunities their background may have afforded them. So there is no real moral argument for outsize wealth amid widespread poverty.
This is not to say that there is no justification for any amount of inequality. After all, inequality can reflect differences in preferences: Some people might consider the pursuit of material wealth more worthwhile than others. Moreover, differential rewards do indeed create incentives for people to learn, work and innovate, activities that promote overall growth and advance poverty reduction.
But, at a certain point, inequality becomes so severe that it has the opposite effect. And we are far beyond that point.
Plenty of people—including many of the world’s wealthy—recognize how unacceptable severe inequality is, both morally and economically. But if the rich speak out against it, they are often shut down and labelled hypocrites. Apparently, the desire to lessen inequality can be considered credible or genuine only by first sacrificing one’s own wealth.
The truth, of course, is that the decision not to renounce, unilaterally, one’s wealth does not discredit a preference for a more equitable society. To label a wealthy critic of extreme inequality a hypocrite amounts to an ad hominem attack and a logical fallacy, intended to silence those whose voices could make a difference.
Fortunately, this tactic seems to be losing some of its potency. It is heartening to see wealthy individuals defying these attacks, not only by openly acknowledging the economic and social damage caused by extreme inequality, but also by criticizing a system that, despite enabling them to prosper, has left too many without opportunities.
In particular, some wealthy Americans are condemning the current tax legislation being pushed by Congressional Republicans and President Donald Trump’s administration, which offers outsize cuts to the highest earners—people like them. As Jack Bogle, the founder of Vanguard Group and a certain beneficiary of the proposed cuts, put it, the plan—which is all but guaranteed to exacerbate inequality—is a “moral abomination”.
Yet, recognizing the flaws in current structures is just the beginning. The greater challenge is to create a viable blueprint for an equitable society. (It is the absence of such a blueprint that has led so many well-meaning movements in history to end in failure.) In this case, the focus must be on expanding profit-sharing arrangements, without stifling or centralizing market incentives that are crucial to drive growth.
A first step would be to give all of a country’s residents the right to a certain share of the economy’s profits. This idea has been advanced in various forms by Marty Weitzman, Hillel Steiner, Richard Freeman, and, just last month, Matt Bruenig. But it is particularly vital today, as the share of wages in national income declines, and the share of profits and rents rises—a trend that technological progress is accelerating.
There is another dimension to profit-sharing that has received little attention, related to monopolies and competition. With modern digital technology, the returns to scale are so large that it no longer makes sense to demand that, say, 1,000 firms produce versions of the same good, each meeting one-thousandth of total demand. A more efficient approach would have 1,000 firms each creating one part of that good. So, when it comes to automobiles, for example, one firm would produce all the gears, another all the brake pads, and so on.
Traditional antitrust and pro-competition legislation—which began in 1890 with the Sherman Act in the US—prevents such an efficient system from taking hold. But a monopoly of production need not mean a monopoly of income, as long as the shares in each company are widely held. It is thus time for a radical change, one that replaces traditional anti-monopoly laws with legislation mandating a wider dispersal of shareholding within each company.
These ideas are largely untested, so much work would need to be done before they could be made operational. But as the world lurches from one crisis to another, and inequality continues to deepen, we do not have the luxury of sticking to the status quo. Unless we confront the inequality challenge head on, social cohesion and democracy itself will come under growing threat. ©2017/Project Syndicate

SCIENCE CITY IN DEHRADUN

SCIENCE CITY IN DEHRADUN
#Uttarakhand में विश्वस्तरीय साइंस सिटी की स्थापना की जाएगी। इसके बनने के बाद #Dehradun कोलकाता, गुवाहाटी, अहमदाबाद और कपूरथला के बाद देश की पांचवीं साइंस सिटी होगी। देहरादून की तरह #Almora में भी आंचलिक विज्ञान केंद्र का संचालन शुरू किया जाएगा। इस समय झाझरा में चल रहे आंचलिक विज्ञान केंद्र में हिमालयन गैलरी, तारामंडल, फन गैलरी, नव प्रवर्तन केंद्र, थ्री डी विज्ञान प्रदर्शनी, फ्रंटियर्स ऑफ टेक्नोलॉजी, ऑडिटोरियम सहित तमाम आधुनिक सुविधाएं उपलब्ध हैं

‘‘त्रिवेन्द्र एक जिन्दगीनामा-खैरासैंण का सूरज’’

डाॅ० नंदन सिंह बिष्ट ने बताया कि मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेंद्र सिंह रावत के जीवन संघर्ष पर उनके द्वारा लिखित पुस्तक ‘‘त्रिवेन्द्र एक जिन्दगीनामा-खैरासैंण का सूरज’’ का लोकार्पण मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेन्द्र के जन्मदिन के अवसर पर बुधवार को लखनऊ में उत्तर प्रदेश के मुख्यमंत्री श्री Yogi Adityanath तथा मुख्यमंत्री श्री Trivendra Singh Rawat की उपस्थिति में भी किया गया। उत्तर प्रदेश के मुख्यमंत्री श्री योगी द्वारा ‘‘खैरासैंण का सूरज’’ की सराहना की गयी तथा मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेन्द्र के जन्मदिन के अवसर पर पुस्तक के विमोचन को सराहनीय प्रयास बताया।
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,SOME EFFORT FOR USE OF TECHNOLOGY IN UTTARAKHAND
#Uttarakhand में जैविक खेती के व्यवसायीकरण की भी अपार संभावनाएं हैं। उन्होंने 25 दिन में खाद्य तैयार करने की विधि भी किसानों को बताई। उन्होंने कहा कि I.I.P. द्वारा विकसित इस आधुनिक गुड़ भट्टी से प्रदूषण भी कम होगा। भट्टी से जो गुड़ बनाया जा रहा, इसमें प्रयुक्त होने वाले गन्ने के उत्पादन में भी जैविक खेती का प्रयोग किया गया है।
मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेन्द्र ने कहा कि 25 दिसम्बर को पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री श्री अटल बिहारी वाजपेयी के जन्म दिवस के अवसर पर सूर्यधार बांध का शिलान्यास किया जायेगा। लगभग 60 करोड़ रूपये की लागत से बनने वाले इस बांध से डोईवाला और उसके आसपास के क्षेत्रों में पूर्ण ग्रेविटी का पेयजल उपलब्ध होगा, जबकि लगभग 900 करोड़ रूपये की लागत से बनने वाले सौंग बांध से #Dehradun में पूर्ण ग्रेविटी का पेयजल उपलब्ध होगा। इससे भू-जल स्तर में आ रही गिरावट को कम करने में मदद मिलेगी। उन्होंने कहा कि अगले वर्ष सोंग नदी पर बांध बनाने की शुरूवात हो जायेगी। उन्होंने कहा कि सरकार की योजना है कि देहरादून से ऋषिकेश तक लोगों को पूरी ग्रेविटी का पेयजल उपलब्ध हो सके। लोगों को ट्यूबबेल के पानी पर निर्भर नहीं रहना पड़ेगा। पानी के लिए लोगों को बिजली पर निर्भर भी नहीं रहना पड़ेगा। मुख्यमंत्री ने कहा कि अकेले ट्यूबबेलों की विद्युत खपत पर ही वर्तमान में 221 करोड़ रूपये का व्यय भार आ रहा है जिसमें से लगभग 65 करोड़ रूपये अकेले देहरादून के ट्यूबबेलों का है। ग्रेविटी आधारित पेयजल की आपूर्ति से विद्युत पर होने वाला व्यय भार भी बचेगा। उन्होंने कहा कि 14 जनवरी 2018 से देहरादून में सेन्ट्रल इंस्टीट्यूट आॅफ प्लास्टिक इंजीनियरिंग एण्ड टेक्नालाॅजी(सीपैट) की कक्षाएं भी शुरू कर दी जायेंगी। शीघ्र ही प्रदेश में नेशनल इंस्टीट्यूट आॅफ फैशन टेक्नालाॅजी(निफ्ट) की भी शुरूवात की जायेगी। जिसके लिए रानीपोखरी में भूमि उपलब्ध करायी जा चुकी है।
मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेन्द्र ने कहा कि चीड़ की पत्तियों से तारपीन के तेल निकालने एवं उसके कचरे से बाॅयोफ्यूल तैयार करने के लिए आईआईपी से उत्तराखण्ड सरकार का MOU हुआ है। मुख्यमंत्री श्री त्रिवेन्द्र सिंह रावत ने कहा कि यह वेस्ट को बेस्ट में परिवर्तित करने का एक प्रयास है। इससे गर्मियों में पिरूल के जंगलों में वनाग्नि से बचाव होगा। जंगल एवं जीव जन्तुओं का भी संरक्षण होगा। इससे जहां सरकार को राजस्व प्राप्त होगा, वहीं स्थानीय लोगों को बेहतर रोजगार भी मिलेगा। राज्य के आठ पहाड़ी जिलों अल्मोड़ा, चमोली, नैनीताल, पौड़ी, रूद्रप्रयाग, पिथौरागढ़, टिहरी एवं उत्तरकाशी में पिरूल के कलेक्शन सेंटर स्थापित किये जायेंगे। पिरूल एकत्रित करने वालों को इंसेटिव भी दिया जायेगा। इसके लिए आधुनिक तकनीकी का इस्तेमाल किया जायेगा। तारपिन आॅयल एवं बाॅयोफ्यूल का औद्योगिक क्षेत्र में भी प्रयोग किया जा सकेगा।

5 January 2018

China’s domestically developed AG600, the world’s largest amphibious aircraft,

China’s domestically developed AG600, the world’s largest amphibious aircraft, performed its maiden flight on Sunday from an airport on the shores of the South China Sea, the latest step in a military modernisation programme.
State television showed live images of the AG600 lifting off from Zhuhai airport in the southern province of Guangdong, which sits on the South China Sea coast.
It returned about an hour later and taxied to its stand accompanied by martial music and greeted by crowds waving Chinese flags.
Xinhua news agency said the aircraft was the “protector spirit of the sea, islands and reefs.”
Specifications
Capacity: 50 passengers
Length: 36.9 m (121’1”)
Wingspan: 38.8 m (127’4”)
Height: 12.1 m (39’8”)
Max. takeoff weight: 53,500 kg (117,947 lb)
It had previously been scheduled to make its first flight earlier this year but it is unclear why it was delayed after ground tests took place in April.
State-owned Aviation Industry Corp of China (AVIC) has spent almost eight years developing the aircraft, which is roughly the size of a Boeing Co 737 and is designed to carry out marine rescues and battle forest fires.
However, state media has also noted its potential use in the South China Sea, where China, Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Brunei all have overlapping claims.
The AG600’s chief designer, Huang Lingcai, was quoted in the official China Daily earlier this month as saying it can make round trips without refuelling from the southern island province of Hainan to James Shoal, claimed by China but which is located close to Sarawak in Malaysian Borneo.
Performance
Maximum speed: 570 km/h (354 mph; 308 kn)
Range: 5,500 km (3,418 mi; 2,970 nmi)
Service ceiling: 10,500 m (34,400 ft)
Powered by four turboprop engines, the AG600 can carry 50 people during maritime search-and-rescue missions, and can scoop up 12 metric tons of water within 20 seconds for fire fighting trips, according to state media.
The aircraft has received 17 orders so far from Chinese government departments and Chinese companies. It has a maximum flight range of 4,500 km (2,800 miles) and a maximum take-off weight of 53.5 tonnes.
It can use conventional airports and also land and take-off from the sea.
China is in the midst of a massive military modernisation programme, ranging from testing anti-satellite missiles to building stealth fighters and the country's first indigenous aircraft carrier, to add to an existing one bought from Ukraine.

When Rajaji defied the salt law

When Rajaji defied the salt law
On Rajaji's death anniversary we recollect the the salt march by Gandhi's deputy from Tiruchi to Vedaranyam against the draconian salt law.
In the summer of 1930 at the break of dawn, C. Rajagopalachari picked up a fistful of spontaneous salt at Agasthyampalli and belted out “Vande Mataram.” It was April 30 that year, Gandhi’s deputy led the salt march from Tiruchi to Vedaranyam against the draconian salt law.
The event triggered marathon acts of nationalists’ defiance leading to month-long arrests of satyagrahis starting from April 30 through the end of May in 1930.
The history of Vedaranyam salt satyagraha harbours its own tales of valour. The success of the salt march was drafted by Sardar Vedarathinam Pillai and his deputies.
Rajaji began his march from Tiruchi on April 13 and reached Vedaranyam on April 28. To help Rajaji break the salt law without attracting any surveillance, Sardar Vedarathinam deputed his men to smuggle Rajaji to Agasthyampalli - some six km from the sathyagraha camp, says A. Vedarathinam, grandson of Sardar Vedarathinam. At the stroke of dawn, Rajaji picked up a fistful of salt and history was made.
Rajaji was temporarily lodged in a cell inside the salt office of Agasthyampalli till the arrival of the magistrate from Mannargudi. Today, the six-by-six foot cell tucked away in a corner of the salt department’s office is a silent testimony of a historic moment.
The nationalistic turf that already laid out by Sardar Vedarathinam was the reason for Vedaranyam being chosen for sathyagraha.
Sustained acts of rebellion by the nationalists tired the administrative apparatus of the British Raj. The salt department’s diary entries of the day speak of a vexed administration. ‘The villagers in Vedaranyam boycotted the administration and refused to render any help to the officials. This forced them to write to the higher officials to depute class IV staff from Adiramapattinam including blacksmiths, carpenters, babars, to provide their services,” says Vedarathinam, who has saved the diary.
Unlike Dandi march, Vedaranyam salt march witnessed four-five women participants, the famous among them being Rukmini Laxmipathi and Sucheta Kripalani.
“There were 99 satyagrahis, and we are still working to find out the names of each satyagrahi. We have tried to take the help of Nehru Memorial Library and any help from anywhere is welcome,” says Vedarathinam, who hopes to build a memorial with the names of each satyagrahi inscribed.
Vairappan, a barbar in his teens, had vowed not to render his services to anybody employed under the Raj. It is recorded that Vairappan walked away midway leaving behind a half-shaven sepoy after he realised that he was an employee of the Raj. Vairappan was later remanded for refusing to obey the orders of the magistrate. Today, a bust honouring Vairappan stands tall here at the satyagraha memorial

डैशबोर्ड क्या है----

डैशबोर्ड क्या है----
1. डैशबोर्ड एक ऐसा प्लेटफॉर्म है, जहां से सभी कल्याणकारी योजनाओं की प्रगति पर एक साथ नजर रखी जा सकती है।
2. यानि किस किस योजना की क्या प्रगति है, लोगों को उस योजना का कितना फायदा मिल रहा है, विभाग किस गति से काम कर रहे हैं, किन क्षेत्रों में सुधार की जरूरत है...इन तमाम बातों पर मुख्यमंत्री एक ही जगह से नजर रख सकते हैं।
3. डैशबोर्ड से सरकार की कल्याणकारी योजनाओं की निगरानी और विभागों की समयबद्ध समीक्षा हो सकती है।
3. सीएम डैशबोर्ड पूरी तरह आईटी पर आधारित होता है... जहां सारे विभाग ऑनलाइन जुड़े होते हैं।
4. उत्तराखंड के सीएम डैशबोर्ड को उत्कर्ष नाम दिया गया है।
5. उत्कर्ष का पूरा नाम UttaraKhand Achieving Results in Systematic and Holistic Way है।
6. जैसा कि इसके नाम से साबित हो रहा है कि यह डैशबोर्ड सेल्फ असेसमेंट के जरिए परिणाम प्राप्त करने का एक माध्यम है।
7. अभी इसकी शुरुआत में 14 अलग अलग विभाग इस डैशबोर्ड के साथ जुड़े हैं। भविष्य में अन्य विभागों को भी इसमें शामिल किया जाना है।
8. डैशबोर्ड से मुख्यमंत्री पता कर सकते हैं कि, किस विभाग की कौन सी योजना की क्या प्रगति है।
9. विभागों और योजनाओं के लिए स्वीकृत बजट में कितना खर्च हुआ है, और कहां कहां खर्च हुआ है।
10. डैशबोर्ड से यह भी पता लग सकता है कि, राज्य में मानव विकास सूचकांक, इकोनॉमिक इंडेक्स आदि सूचनाओं की क्या स्थिति है।
11. मसलन पेयजल विभाग के तहत कितने घरों में पानी के कनेक्शन दिए गए हैं...कितने घरों में बिजली पहुंच चुकी है।
12. कितने स्कूलों में छात्र-शिक्षक अनुपात संतुलित है, कितने स्कूलों में छात्र संख्या कम है आदि।
13. इसी तरह डैशबोर्ड से यह भी पता चलेगा कि राज्य में कितने बच्चों और कितनी गर्भवती महिलाओं का टीकाकरण हुआ, कितनी महिलाओं का सुरक्षित प्रसव हुआ...कितने लोगों तक जीवनरक्षक दवाएं पहुंच रही हैं..आदि।
14. यानि राज्य में योजनाओं का वास्तविक लाभ जनता को मिल रहा है या नहीं और अगर मिल रहा है तो कहां तक मिला है, यह सब डैशबोर्ड से पता किया जा सकेगा।
15. डैशबोर्ड का एक और फायदा ये होगा कि इससे रियल टाइम डाटा जुटाया जाएगा । यह गाउंड लेवल का डाटा जिलों, ब्लॉकों और गांवों से एकत्र डाटा रहेगा. जिसके जरिए अधिकारियों के कार्यों और योजनाओं की ऑनलाइन समीक्षा हो सकेगी।
16. आप जानते हैं, उत्तराखंड की भौगोलिक स्थितियों के कारण कई बार अधिकारियों के साथ एक जगह पर बैठक नहीं हो पाती, लेकिन डैशबोर्ड के जरिए उनके कामकाजों की समीक्षा आसानी से हो जाएगी।
17. सबसे अहम बात ये है कि भ्रष्टाचार मिटाने की दिशा में डैशबोर्ड फायदेमंद साबित होगा।
18. अगर किसी विभाग में भ्रष्टाचार कि शिकायत होती है, या उसके कामकाज को लेकर सवाल उठते हैं तो, मुख्यमंत्री को यह बात विभाग की परफॉरमेंस रिपोर्ट देखकर पता चल जाएगी।
19. यानी सचिवालय से लेकर जिलों तक किसी भी विभाग या अधिकारी ने लापरवाही बरती तो उस पर सीधी नजर रखी जा सकेगी।

DBT of fertilizer subsidy to make farm sector planning more effective

DBT of fertilizer subsidy to make farm sector planning more effective
The agriculture ministry will implement direct benefit transfer (DBT) of fertilizer subsidy in the 14 remaining states from 1 January 2018
As the government rolls out direct benefit transfer (DBT) for fertilizer subsidies, one of the largest subsidy reforms currently underway, the massive amount of data being generated is expected to provide a clear picture of farming activity in the country and help make future planning for the sector more effective.
The government is keeping subsidy reform in the fertilizer sector low key for the complexities involved. The complexities include improper land records, and the involvement of a large number of tenant farmers.
With DBT on fertilizers implemented in all but 14 states, the government has already noticed a close to 10% reduction in subsidy requirement in certain states, fewer instances of retailers overcharging farmers, better transaction times and a reduction in diversion of subsidized fertilizers to other countries for sale at market prices, a person with knowledge of the scheme’s implementation said on condition of anonymity.
The linking of Aadhaar, a 12-digit biometric identification number issued by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), with soil health cards and land records wherever possible, is helping policymakers get a better picture of the farming activity in the country.
The data helps in suggesting which crop can be grown where in what season for optimum productivity, based on soil health profile. The software system linked to the point of sale (PoS) machines deployed by the retailers also suggest the best combination of fertilizers needed. At present, farmers have the choice of going by the system’s suggestion or make their own choices.
Once the system functions fully, it will lead to better soil health management, balanced fertilization, and better productivity, besides increasing transparency. Earlier, officials could only be aware that fertilizer supplies had reached a particular district and not whether they had reached the farmer. With Aadhaar linkage, policy makers would know if a farmer has got the plant nutrient.
“This will also stop any leakage that might be happening in the system. A minimum 5-10% saving in consumption and as a result, saving in subsidy, is expected,” said the person mentioned above.
This is significant considering that fertilizer subsidy of Rs70,000 crore was originally allocated for the current fiscal.Fourteen states including Kerala, Bihar, Karnataka, West Bengal, J&K, Jharkhand, Telangana, Odisha, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh will switch to DBT on fertilizers by 1 January, according to the implementation plan.
The agriculture ministry is on target to provide soil health cards for all 120 million farm holdings by the end of this year. According to the ministry, use of these cards have led to 8-10% lower consumption of fertilizers in 2016-17 compared to the year before, while due to balanced use of nutrients overall crop production went up by up to 12%. In addition to rolling out DBT in disbursal of fertilizer subsidies, the centre in early 2015 initiated 100% neem coating of urea to prevent industrial use and smuggling.

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