Re: Indian Economy: News and Discussion (Apr 1 2011)
Posted: 10 Jan 2012 17:07
Deleted
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
The cumulative flows of USD 22.83 billion for the April-November period have crossed USD 19.43 billion which came in the full fiscal of 2010-11, according to officials.
During the April-November period, the FDI was up by 62.81 per cent from USD 14.02 billion a year ago.
"At this rate we would be able to cross USD 30 billion figure by end of the current fiscal," the official added.
MUMBAI, India (AP) — A skyscraper building boom in China and India may be a sign of an impending economic correction in two of Asia's largest economies, according to a new report by Barclays Capital.
Barclays has mapped an "unhealthy correlation" between construction of the world's tallest buildings and impending financial crises over the last 140 years.
Today, China is home to half of the world's skyscrapers — defined as buildings over 240 meters (787 feet) tall — currently under construction.
India, which has just two skyscrapers, is seeing its first skyscraper building boom, with 14 under construction, including the world's second-tallest tower, in the financial capital Mumbai.
India, which has just two skyscrapers but is building 14 more, takes top honors for hubris: The second tallest building in the world, the Tower of India, is now under construction in Mumbai.
Nonperforming loans in India — a substantial number of them to real estate ventures — grew by nearly a third in the first half of this fiscal year, more than triple the average annual growth rate since 2006, according to the Reserve Bank of India.
"If history proves to be right, this building boom in India and China could simply be a reflection of a misallocation of capital, which may result in an economic correction for two of Asia's largest economies in the next five years," Barclays said.
This is pure CRAP. I have been going and buying vegetables and milk practically every day, for the past 3 months. Not even for one day have I seen the prices depreciate. In fact for milk they have gone up drastically.Theo_Fidel wrote:Meanwhile...
Yup! Inflation has now turned into deflation! RBI has routed both inflation and economic growth. Killing two Kauva with 8.5% REPO rate or 13% bank lending rate.
http://business-standard.com/india/news ... 36/460939/
Food inflation gives way to deflation, prices fall 3.36%
may be you meant it as a joke but it's true. cheating and copying for the equivalent of mandarin entrance exam in ancient china was widespread.abhischekcc wrote: The only original thing China ever made was copying.
The sheer volume of knowledge required to succeed in the Imperial examinations elevated cheating to something of an art form in China. Miniature books were devised to be concealed in the palm of a hand; shirts had important passages from the Confucian Classics sewn, in miniscule lettering, to their insides; fans were constructed with pass-notes on their obverse. Other duplicities included hiring veteran scholars to sit the exams in one's stead, and the simple expedient of copying a neighbour in the exam hall. At certain times, bribery of examiners was commonplace.
As every Chinese teacher can attest these cheating methods, refined over centuries - are alive and well today.
One lasting legacy of an inflexible and daunting examination system is that Chinese students have become experts at subverting such systems. But the most important legacy of the imperial examination system is surely the massive academic effort channelled into the National University Entrance Examinations in China each year.
SBajwa wrote:http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120105/biz.htm#5
India Inc raises $1.58 bn in Nov through ECBs, FCCBs
If US commercial paper yields were even half of what it is for some of "premier" Indian companies, they would go out of business in a jiffy! Goes to show despite all our mocking at the west and their troubles, we are no less immune to the world affairs than any other country.Indian companies with a record $5.3 billion of convertible bonds due this year may see borrowing costs more than quadruple after the worst performance among the world’s 10 biggest stock markets.
Reliance Communications Ltd., Suzlon Energy Ltd. (SUEL) and Tata Steel Ltd. (TATA), sold a third of the total debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Their shares are trading as much as 88 percent below the bond conversion prices. Should they choose to issue debt that can’t be converted into equity to meet repayments, companies will face an average yield of 6.92 percent on dollar-denominated bonds, a HSBC Holdings Plc index shows, compared with 1.55 percent on convertible notes, according to Barclays Capital data.
“Companies are heading into a debt trap,” Raj Kothari, a convertible bond trader at Sun Global Investments Ltd., said in a phone interview from London on Jan. 4. “Companies have no option but to repay the debt.”
Cash levels for Indian borrowers relative to their interest commitments fell to a five-year low after the central bank raised interest rates a record 13 times since March 2010 to combat inflation and as operating profits declined, Standard & Poor’s Indian unit Crisil Ltd. (CRISIL) said in a report this month. Corporate earnings will probably post the biggest drop in three years in the financial year ending March, according to analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Reliance Communications, India’s second-largest mobile- phone operator, is due to repay $925 million of convertible debt on March 1, the largest amount by any Indian company this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Zero Coupon
The company’s zero-coupon bonds, sold five years ago to help fund capacity expansion in the world’s fastest-growing wireless services market, can be exchanged into stock at 661.23 rupees ($12.7). Reliance Communications (RCOM) rose 1.3 percent to 82.1 rupees at close in Mumbai, about 88 percent below the conversion price. The shares more than halved in value last year.
The Mumbai-based company’s 30 billion rupees of 11.2 percent securities maturing in March 2019 were little changed today at a yield of 9.72 percent, or 147 basis points more than equivalent-maturity government notes, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“Reliance Communications will ensure timely redemption of its foreign-currency convertible bonds,” Rohit Khanna, a Mumbai-based spokesman said by e-mail on Jan. 9.
Suzlon Energy, India’s biggest wind-turbine maker, has a total of $389 million of equity-linked debt maturing in June and October with conversion prices of 76.7 rupees and 97.3 rupees, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company’s shares advanced 4.3 percent to 20.5 rupees in Mumbai.
‘Adequate Liquidity’
Tata Steel, the biggest producer of the alloy, will redeem $382 million of convertible bonds that exchange into equity at 730.5 rupees in September. The stock rose 3 percent to 383 rupees today.
“We have adequate liquidity,” Prabhat Sharma, Tata Steel’s spokesman, said by e-mail yesterday. “Refinancing is always an option depending upon the terms.”
Kirti Vagadia, head of corporate finance at Pune, western India-based Suzlon Energy, declined to comment when contacted yesterday.
Companies’ abilities to meet interest payments may weaken because sales have decelerated amid the global economic slowdown, Crisil said on Jan. 3. The report, based on financials of 420 companies in the S&P CNX 500 Index, said the “interest coverage” ratio had dropped to a five-year low.
Dollar bond costs for India borrowers are seven basis points, or 0.07 percentage point, below the 6.99 percent yield reached in October, the highest level since Oct. 30, 2009, according to HSBC. Similar rates for Chinese companies dropped to 5.88 percent, from a 31-month high of 6.84 percent touched on Oct. 4, the data show.
Subex Ltd. (SUBX), a telecommunications software maker, is looking at “multiple options to raise funds” such as selling equity or raising debt to repay two convertible bonds of $99 million maturing in March, Ramanathan J., a vice president at the Bangalore-based company, said in a phone interview on Jan. 9. The company will decide how to get $135 million to refinance the notes within the next month, he said.
Higher Rates
All except for $116 million of the bonds due this year were sold before 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, as investors were attracted by the Sensex trebling in value in 2006 and 2007.
Indian stock markets fell last year as growth slowed to below 7 percent for the first time since June 2009, the central bank raised interest rates more than any other Asian monetary authority and European leaders failed to find a resolution to the region’s debt crisis.
The cost of protecting the debt of eight Indian borrowers against default fell one basis point to 454 basis points yesterday, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by CME Group Inc. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the privately negotiated market. Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a company fail to adhere to its debt agreements.
Five companies defaulted on $183 million of convertible debt in 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Indian borrowers sold $797 million of equity-linked bonds last year, down 55 percent from 2010, the data show.
Equity Dilution
Issuers will be able to avoid diluting their stock by repaying the bonds, said Prabal Banerji, chief financial officer at Adani Power Ltd., India’s 15th most-indebted company with $7.4 billion of loans outstanding.
“Repayment will be a challenge for many companies, but it’s still a blessing in disguise because borrowers won’t need to offer their shares at cheap prices to investors,” Banerji said in a phone interview from the western Indian city of Ahmedabad on Jan. 9.
Indian companies sought to borrow $92.2 million overseas in November to redeem foreign-currency convertible bonds, the most since permission to raise such loans without prior approval from the central bank was given in July, data published on Jan. 4 on the Reserve Bank of India’s website show.
“Equity prices have gone below the conversion prices on convertible bonds,” Samir Shah, head of technical analysis at BP Equities Pvt. said in a phone interview from Mumbai on Jan. 6. “There’s no option for companies but to repay the debt.”
Well, there might be some truth in that.Kakkaji wrote:A new tool for economic forecasting:
china-india-skyscraper-boom-may-herald-downturn
MUMBAI, India (AP) — A skyscraper building boom in China and India may be a sign of an impending economic correction in two of Asia's largest economies, according to a new report by Barclays Capital.
Barclays has mapped an "unhealthy correlation" between construction of the world's tallest buildings and impending financial crises over the last 140 years.
Today, China is home to half of the world's skyscrapers — defined as buildings over 240 meters (787 feet) tall — currently under construction.
India, which has just two skyscrapers, is seeing its first skyscraper building boom, with 14 under construction, including the world's second-tallest tower, in the financial capital Mumbai.
India, which has just two skyscrapers but is building 14 more, takes top honors for hubris: The second tallest building in the world, the Tower of India, is now under construction in Mumbai.
Nonperforming loans in India — a substantial number of them to real estate ventures — grew by nearly a third in the first half of this fiscal year, more than triple the average annual growth rate since 2006, according to the Reserve Bank of India.
"If history proves to be right, this building boom in India and China could simply be a reflection of a misallocation of capital, which may result in an economic correction for two of Asia's largest economies in the next five years," Barclays said.
When the clocks strike midnight
in New Delhi on Jan. 12, India will mark the first year in
history it has recorded no new cases of polio.
But India does not pretend to be world power or financial capital of the world.Ambar wrote:SBajwa wrote:http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120105/biz.htm#5
India Inc raises $1.58 bn in Nov through ECBs, FCCBs
“Companies are heading into a debt trap,” Raj Kothari, a convertible bond trader at Sun Global Investments Ltd., said in a phone interview from London on Jan. 4. “Companies have no option but to repay the debt.”
Cash levels for Indian borrowers relative to their interest commitments fell to a five-year low after the central bank raised interest rates a record 13 times since March 2010 to combat inflation and as operating profits declined, Standard & Poor’s Indian unit Crisil Ltd. (CRISIL) said in a report this month.
Indian companies sought to borrow $92.2 million overseas in November to redeem foreign-currency convertible bonds, the most since permission to raise such loans without prior approval from the central bank was given in July, data published on Jan. 4 on the Reserve Bank of India’s website show.
“Equity prices have gone below the conversion prices on convertible bonds,” Samir Shah, head of technical analysis at BP Equities Pvt. said in a phone interview from Mumbai on Jan. 6. “There’s no option for companies but to repay the debt.”
If US commercial paper yields were even half of what it is for some of "premier" Indian companies, they would go out of business in a jiffy! Goes to show despite all our mocking at the west and their troubles, we are no less immune to the world affairs than any other country.
This was widely anticipated and in fact is head line news in today's Al-Hundi and has an entire page dedicated to it in the middle.Saar, even though this is a 'good news' , its still too early to say that polio is eliminated . Most cases of polio are asymptomatic . less than 1% will progress to paralysis . Now , most (practically all) polio cases come from UP and Bihar . About 50-100 came up on an average every year in the last decade. The method used for is 'acute flaccid paralysis' surveillance . That condition can have several causes. Its classification as polio depends upon whether the virus is found in stool or not
It is a major milestone and this milestone has to be celebrated, particularly this was mostly lead, managed and funded by India. Here is the opinion from an expert within the field of virology and the different types of polio virii to counter and the analysis and unique desi solutions that went with it.gakakkad wrote:Saar, even though this is a 'good news' , its still too early to say that polio is eliminated
Not only that friend Paki has gone on to infect Tallel than Mountain friend. So Panda now has more cases of Polio than India.vina wrote:Of course, the icing on the cake is that we are delinked finally from Pakiland, which continues in the illustrious companies of Nigeria and Afghanistan.
Polio was eradicated from most of India almost a decade ago. Most of the cases were clustered to a few districts in UP and Bihar We use a live viral vaccine , which multiplies in the gut . The vaccine virus too gets excreted . The advantage is that it creates something called herd immunity. In a nutshell just like the disease virus , the vaccine virus too gets transmitted by feco-oral route. (meaning it finds its way from someone's soup-e-rear to someone else's mouth , it the second person is not immunized , he accidentally derives benefits of vaccination ) . The threshold for herd immunity for polio is 85%. Meaning that if 85 % of the population is immunized , the disease will be eliminated. The rest will get immunity by getting infected with the vaccine virus .suraj wrote:
I've been following this news since last fall, when trends indicated that a whole year may pass without any natural polio case incidences. I'm very happy to see this come true. As I recall from the articles back in October, to be declared polio-free, there has to be no incidences for three years. Despite all the issues with tracking cases in UP and Bihar, the fact that we've achieved this is a major milestone. We need to go back no more than 10-20 years to understand how the thought of us eradicating polio in such a short time seemed implausible. It would have happened sooner but for the whole ridiculous 'vaccines will make you infertile' conspiracy a few years ago.
In India, the disparities of such factors spelt differential effectiveness among States. Not only did some communities exhibit lower vaccine effectiveness, they also had more intense wild virus transmission. The conjunction of both problems made U.P. and Bihar stand out as the most difficult regions for polio eradication. Indian scientists had actually warned the GPEI of such pitfalls but global leaders from rich countries couldn't believe that such extreme variations could exist with wild virus epidemiology and vaccine effectiveness. Once that lesson was learned, the progress was rapid.
Wild polioviruses exist in 3 types, and OPV also contains attenuated strains of the 3 types. So it is called trivalent OPV (tOPV). Among the 3 types, type 2 is the most efficient; that was why type 2 wild virus disappeared in 1999, within a few years of national pulse vaccinations. But type 2 in the tOPV also interferes with the others, making them very inefficient. From 2000, the frequency of campaigns with tOPV was increased in U.P. and Bihar, but to no avail. Type 2 had to be removed from tOPV to get the best out of types 1 and 3. In 2005 and thereafter, a new monovalent type 1 OPV (mOPV-1) was used in U.P. and Bihar — it is three times more effective than tOPV. This was one factor of success. But gaps in immunity were created against type 3; consequently, type 3 outbreaks occurred in 2007-2009. Then, a bivalent vaccine (bOPV with 1 and 3) was developed. It was non-inferior to mOPV-1 or mOPV-3. From early 2010, bOPV has been widely used in U.P. and Bihar during campaigns, while tOPV is used everywhere for routine immunisation.
While the problem of “failure of vaccine” was being addressed, there was also the problem of “failure to vaccinate”. Seasonally, millions of families from U.P. and Bihar migrate for work — some to Maharashtra or Punjab, others within their States. Their children missed both routine and campaign doses. The tactic of vaccination in transit — in trains/buses and in stone quarries/brick kilns — became the norm from 2005. As all bottlenecks were cleared, success ensued.
One question. Per what I see, the polio caused by vaccine is show separately as VAPP (or something) and wild polio in another category. So there is someway they distinguish between the two, some form of gene sequencing ? It seems that every case of polio is analyzed and gene sequenced to see what type it is, where it came from, etc.. So wouldn't absence of wild polio virus in sewers show that it is out of "circulation" (largely?).gakakkad wrote:This is one of the reason why , absence of virus from sewers will not be the most certain sign for success. The second reason is that the virus may be isolated ,but mistaken as the vaccine virus if serology alone is used to diagnose .
Isn't that already happening in India ? My kid (15 months old) got two shots (IIRC) of Pentaxim (the pentalvent vaccine one of which is IPV) as part of his regular immunization in addition to OPV drops ? Maybe if the Indian guys (Shanta, Panacea) etc start cranking out the DTaP and the IPV combo and probably add the sixth Hepatitis into into and crash costs , that will solve a huge public health pain point and have better health for a whole larger segment of the population, lot lesser no of pricks and costs that would be a truly game changer.1) switching to injectable vaccine in the regions polio was long eradicated. (using a quadrivalent vaccine combining it with diphtheria , would reduce the cost of cold storage , besides ensuring that immunodeficient individuals don't get disease from vaccine .
Leprosy is another one largely eliminated. My dad (a dermatologist) used to get hundreds of cases when it was endemic and in his 50 year career including in govt service must have seen literally thousands.Other schemes had marginal success . Even though the number of cases today are much lesser than 2 decades ago , the disease needs still to be eliminated
Actually , private pediatricians have been doing it for ages. Private docs in India are extremely quick in adapting to latest guidelines , research and equipment .Problem is that only 20% of kids are lucky enough to go to private docs.Vina wrote:
Isn't that already happening in India ? My kid (15 months old) got two shots (IIRC) of Pentaxim (the pentalvent vaccine one of which is IPV) as part of his regular immunization in addition to OPV drops ? Maybe if the Indian guys (Shanta, Panacea) etc start cranking out the DTaP and the IPV combo and probably add the sixth Hepatitis into into and crash costs , that will solve a huge public health pain point and have better health for a whole larger segment of the population, lot lesser no of pricks and costs that would be a truly game changer.
I think the MMR and HiB and other vaccines from the Indian guys have brought down costs significantly.
What are your thoughts on having Rotarix part of normal immunization, given that diarrhea is such a killer in India (again, easy to give like OPV) and also Prevnar (bacterial meningitis is such a terrible disease) ? Of course all these are part of the schedule which my kid's pediatrician gave and IIRC are part of the Indian Assoc of Pediatricians (IAP) recommended schedule, when does it become part of the public health system ?
Indian Journal of Medical Ethics wrote:
National Rural Health Mission: a failing mission .
Atul S Bahadur1
While India today is in the forefront of healthcare, and we often hear of health tourism being a great revenue generator, the vast majority of Indians, especially in the rural areas, today lack even the basic health amenities.
Even today "quacks” or "Docsaab”, who are former compounders of doctors or even the compounder’s assistants, rule the roost in such areas. Those in the government setup largely ignore such "quacks” as they are regularly paid off to turn a blind eye to their activities. It is common to have a person walking into a clinic and asking for a drip because of "weakness”. In a matter of 30-45 minutes, dextrose is pumped into that person alongwith injections of Avil and dexamethasone, he or she ends up paying some Rs 250 to 300 and leaves satisfied at having been treated well. Even the auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs) and "dais” who are the "Doctorani” have well educated persons utilising their services for ante-natal services and deliveries.
Against this background of grassroots realities, the National Rural Health Mission may have been launched to remove the dichotomy in healthcare. As it stands even today, the NRHM could have revolutionised healthcare delivery in India and been a role model for all the Third World to emulate. But this is not the case.
The NRHM mission document states that "The goal of the mission is to improve the availability of and access to quality health care by people, especially for those residing in rural area, the poor, women and children.” (1) It primarily aims to improve the following parameters: health, sanitation and hygiene, nutrition and safe drinking water. It seeks to provide to rural people equitable, affordable, accountable and effective primary healthcare.
Along with other national programmes like the Janani Suraksha Yojana, the NRHM can go a long way to improve the mother and child welfare parameters in the country. While the concept is utopian, given the ground realities in the country, it has become a milch cow for many to siphon off funds.
The NRHM workforce comprises accredited social health activists (ASHAs), auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs), and multipurpose workers (MPWs) along with contract or "samvida” staff nurses, AYUSH (ayurveda, yoga, unani, siddha and homoeopathy) and allopathic doctors. There is a great emphasis on reviving the AYUSH system of medical treatment for which various measures have been incorporated into the mission.
The ASHAs form the backbone of the NRHM and are meant to be selected by and be accountable to the panchayat. There is no fixed remuneration provided for the ASHAs but it is assumed that they will be suitably compensated for their work through various schemes. They are to act as a bridge between ANMs and the village. They are to be provided with a drug kit including Ayush drugs for common ailments, worth Rs 1,000, which are to be replenished from time to time. The government has also allocated "total support of up to Rs 10,000 per ASHA for initial training, monthly orientation, drug kit, support material, travel expenses, etc. Rs 5,000 permanent advance may be made available to every gram panchayat as a permanent advance for performance based incentive for ASHAs and anganwadi workers(2).
In fact the ASHAs were selected by the government’s provincial medical service doctors for a consideration and legalised later by getting the panchayats to appoint them. Yet, even today no ASHA has a drug kit and so there is no question of these kits being replenished. Finally, funds are provided to the panchayats to transport patients to primary health centres (PHCs) but again these are siphoned off as most of the population is not aware of this and other facilities under the NRHM.
Bringing AYUSH into the mainstream is a major thrust area of the NRHM. AYUSH doctors were to be appointed at PHCs and sub centres, and pharmacists and drugs were to be made available to them(1). However, on appointment they are being posted to allopathic hospitals. They are not provided with AYUSH drugs and pharmacists. They are prescribing allopathic drugs to patients and the unfortunate patient does not know that the treating physician is a homeopath or hakim or vaidya prescribing allopathic medicines. As the salary of AYUSH doctors is on par with that of the allopathic doctors, and unemployment levels are high in these streams due to mushrooming of colleges, there is a huge rush for appointment as samvida or ad hoc medical officers. The office of the chief medical officer (CMO) demands two to four months’ salary (Rs 50,000 to Rs one lakh) to appoint a samvida medical officer. Although the guidelines call for local persons to be appointed, doctors from other, far-off districts are being appointed after providing a proper "consideration”. Not too long ago, interviews for the post had to be cancelled when the office was filled with a large number of AYUSH doctors willing to pay upto Rs 1 lakh for the appointment as "samvida chikitsa adhikari”. The office was also inundated with letters and calls from ministers, local members of the legislative assembly and the bureaucracy.
Similarly, allopathic doctors are also being asked to pay for appointments, though a large number of their posts lie vacant. As all appointments are being made for a year at a time, with a gap of 15 days before re-appointment, money is being demanded on an annual basis. The NRHM scheme is to be functional from 2005 to 2012. The appointments for the scheme are on an annual basis, with a gap in service of 15 days. So large amounts of money change hands annually. This will lead to a window period of four months in the whole scheme with no ‘Samvida’ staff at the PHCs.
Samvida staff receives their salary only after they submit an attendance register every month at the CMO’s office. This must be submitted personally after being counter-signed by the medical officer in charge and the deputy CMO. In the process, two to three working days are wasted. Earlier, before they started transferring salaries directly to the staff member’s bank account, the office staff would demand money to release the same; otherwise, payments would be delayed, or amounts deducted on flimsy grounds. Even now, if a proper "consideration” is not paid to the office staff, you can land up receiving your salary after six months or more. As the amount involved is large, the demands too are higher. The attitude is that they are doing you a favour by giving you a salary and you are a new and easy source of profit.
While the NRHM envisages three staff nurses in every PHC with residences(2), it provides for only one ‘samvida’ doctor with no provision for residence. If the ‘samvida’ doctor does night duty, then there will be no one for the OPD services and vice versa. So there is a lack of vision in the provision of basic services.
All contract doctors and staff are supposed to work for eight hours a day, but permanent staff doctors try to exploit them by making them do their own work. At times, they make them work during non-duty hours. They push the ‘samvida’ staff around according to their whims and fancies, threatening termination on the flimsiest of grounds under a contract which is biased towards the office of the CMO.
The Janani Suraksha Yojana, being a major thrust area for safe deliveries in hospitals under the NRHM, is the biggest source of corruption. A mother from a rural area is to be paid Rs 1,400 and one from an urban area is to be paid Rs 1,200 for delivery expenses. ASHAs are also compensated for bringing mothers to the PHCs. But the mother and her attendants are made to cough up Rs 500 before the delivery. Around Rs 150 is taken for medicines that are provided to the centres free of cost under the NRHM. The unfortunate patient is told that she is going to get around Rs 700 for the delivery, so the lure of the money makes her pay as they would under normal circumstances have had to pay for the delivery to the dais or the doctor. The vast majority of deliveries are done by ANMs who pose as doctors and share their booty with the system, so the whole thing works flawlessly. Of late, a new practice has emerged: even home deliveries are shown as having been done at the PHCs to siphon off funds and skew the data to show a higher number of deliveries in the government setup.
Samvida doctors under the NRHM are an exploited lot of daily wagers who have no casual or earned leave and must work even on gazetted holidays, failing which their salary will be deducted by an amount which is a few hundred rupees more than what they would be paid for that day. The PMS doctors look down upon them as lesser beings who are disturbing their well oiled system of "gratification” for doing no work. Due to the undefined "hanging sword of termination” in their contracts samvida staff is forced to work as bonded labourers.
The most unfortunate fact about this utopian scheme of the NRHM is that the delivering agency assigned to it is the very one that failed to provide these services in the first place. Now they are being paid a second time to do the very job for which they were appointed by the government. To give one example, if you hear Provincial Medical Services doctors talking about a PHC and mentioning figures like Rs 1 or 2 lakh, they are talking about the revenue in bribes that the PHC generates per month. Based on this amount, the CMO and other senior officers demand their share of the booty.
To expect these people to deliver under any scheme or mission would be like asking for the sun.
Looking for a mechanism that may make the NRHM succeed, at least in Uttar Pradesh today, is a nightmare to my mind. A government set up will always find ways to make money out of the scheme, as is already being done with Pulse Polio. It is also difficult, if not impossible, to find an honest NGO to deliver; even they have to grease palms to get their dues and once they clear that hurdle, the lure of easy money is difficult to resist and the bureaucracy will keep demanding its pound of flesh.
The NRHM is yet another failed dream.
I d love to learn something from someone like him. He has done a lot of research . He is well regarded world over .ramana wrote: Gakakkad good strategy. Can you communicate with him via Hindu editors?
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home ... 492508.cmsIndian students rank 2nd last in global test
Hemali Chhapia, TNN | Jan 15, 2012, 02.24AM IST
MUMBAI: Across the world, India is seen as an education powerhouse - based largely on the reputation of a few islands of academic excellence such as the IITs. But scratch the glossy surface of our education system and the picture turns seriously bleak.
Fifteen-year-old Indians who were put, for the first time, on a global stage stood second to last, only beating Kyrgyzstan when tested on their reading, math and science abilities.
India ranked second last among the 73 countries that participated in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), conducted annually to evaluate education systems worldwide by the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Secretariat. The survey is based on two-hour tests that half a million students are put through.
China's Shanghai province, which participated in PISA for the first time, scored the highest in reading. It also topped the charts in mathematics and science.
"More than one-quarter of Shanghai's 15 year olds demonstrated advanced mathematical thinking skills to solve complex problems, compared to an OECD average of just 3%," noted the analysis.
The states of Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh, showpieces for education and development, were selected by the central government to participate in PISA, but their test results were damning.
15-yr-old Indians 200 points behind global topper
Tamil Nadu and Himachal, showpieces of India's education and development, fared miserably at the Programme for International Student Asssment, conducted by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Secretariat.
An analysis of the performance of the two states showed:
In math, considered India's strong point, they finished second and third to last, beating only Kyrgyzstan
When the Indian students were asked to read English text, again Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh were better than only Kyrgyzstan. Girls were better than boys
The science results were the worst. Himachal Pradesh stood last, this time behind Kyrgyzstan. Tamil Nadu was slightly better and finished third from the bottom
The average 15-year-old Indian is over 200 points behind the global topper. Comparing scores, experts estimate that an Indian eighth grader is at the level of a South Korean third grader in math abilities or a second-year student from Shanghai when it comes to reading skills.
The report said: "In Himachal, 11% of students are estimated to have a proficiency in reading literacy that is at or above the baseline level needed to participate effectively and productively in life. It follows that 89% of students in Himachal are estimated to be below that baseline level."
Clearly, India will have to ramp up its efforts and get serious about what goes on in its schools. "Better educational outcomes are a strong predictor for future economic growth," OECD secretary-general Angel Gurria told The Times of India.
"While national income and educational achievement are still related, PISA shows that two countries with similar levels of prosperity can produce very different results. This shows that an image of a world divided neatly into rich and well-educated countries and poor and badly-educated countries is now out of date."
In case of scientific literacy levels in TN, students were estimated to have a mean score that was below the means of all OECD countries, but better than Himachal. Experts are unsure if selecting these two states was a good idea.
Shaheen Mistry, CEO of Teach For India programme, said, "I am glad that now there is data that lets people know how far we still have to go."
When data collection has such a glaring lapse , we take the results FWIW. Especially when US has a high school drop out rate of 50% .
Himachal Pradesh-India and Tamil Nadu-India did not meet PISA standards for student sampling. Due to
irregularities in the student sample numbers, it was established after the testing that these economies sampled
from student lists that were often incomplete: not all 15-year-olds within the school were listed. It was not
possible to determine whether any bias existed in the obtained sample. Caution should be exercised when using
the data from Himachal Pradesh-India or Tamil Nadu-India and when interpreting the reported analyses.