Veena Krishna

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Obama India Visit

Indians felt honoured when American President Barack Obama gave them an exclusive visit…. honoured that it was his first visit to an Asian Country, a visit just over a year after him becoming President and a visit of 3 days. People around me including journalists said it is a sign that the world and most importantly America today acknowledges India’s supremacy over the world.

But Barack Obama’s India agenda was very simple and he did not hide it. He came here for immediate needs, no long term sustainable relationship kinds. He for one realised that while Indians have been stealing American jobs which he so ferociously objected to on his own land by imposing higher taxes on outsourced jobs, he soon realised that India also has the potential to create jobs in America. So he came here to take home 53,670 jobs which will give USA 9.5 billion dollars export business and then tell Americans that we are not the losers, we are actually at the winning end. So it was not surprising then that he landed in Mumbai, the commercial capital, rather than Delhi. Again to reiterate that he is not interested in India-Kashmir-Pakistan affairs or anything else.

What interests America most about India and is very clearly evident are the nuclear deals our country can offer post the Nuclear deal signed by India and USA. No wonder then that the first thing Obama announced was that high-end technology exports are being lifted, particularly in the defence and space research areas… To deepen cooperation on nuclear, defence and other high-end spectrum … that’s why America woos India today. India is the country which offers the largest value of nuclear deals to the world today with a 150 billion dollars nuclear power market. American companies already lag Russian and French firms in doing business in India due to host of past roadblocks between the two countries. Now with all the nuclear issues including liability issues resolved, India is a big market in this segment for America.

Obama did not talk of building schools, giving scholarship to needy students, helping India in its healthcare needs…. He did not really convey the Diwali wishes in its entirety – Health, Wealth and Prosperity for all.

Wooing an attractive and advantageous lady for the male’s own benefit is nothing we should be jumping around for.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Tipping Point of Peepli [Live]

Coming back today after seeing Aamir Khan Productions' Peepli [Live], I rejoiced in the fact that finally we have cracked the art of showing serious issues of village life in commercial cinema and not leaving it to documentaries which the mass never views. I am not a movie reviewer or critic so won't go into the details of the moviemaking. But the movie touched upon a topic that I wished to make a documentary of in 2008 but never did. Never did I imagine that it could become the topic of a movie and that too made so creatively as to make it so gripping. Of course I don't say it has not been done. In fact Swades too was a touching and inspiring movie on rural India. But this beats all of them as the hero was the farmer with no Aamir or Shah Rukh Khan... and no romance, no songs!
I then came back home and decided to reproduce the blog I had written in 2008 when farmer suicides had reached their peak. This was after reading the book Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell. Below is the blog of 2008.
Understanding the Tipping Point of farmer suicides.
The entire last week was spent in asking or answering the logic behind the finance minister’s Rs. 60,000 crore debt waiver for farmers.
The reasons ranged from bailing out banks, starting afresh both for banks and farmers, compensating farmers for suffering the hardships of a weak agricultural system.
But the bigger question is never answered – is it going to stop farmer suicides?
Lets take the region with the largest number of farmer suicides - The Vidarbha region of Maharashtra where one may hear of a suicide each day of the week.
So where did it all start for Vidarbha? - What triggered these suicides in the first place? It started over a decade ago. Farmers in RICH cotton growing Vidarbha were made poor by the government’s pricing policy, which failed to get them a market price for their cotton. Thus began their financial woes.

Sharad Joshi, a well known spokesman of farmers movement says that farmers can stand a certain level of indebtedness, what they have difficulty in withstanding is PUBLIC HUMILIATION AND SOCIAL STIGMA heaped on them by certain types of creditors – these being co-operative bank recovery officials.
Okay we know the start, so what course did the government follow - Not difficult to answer - financial packages or dole outs.

In June 2004, the UPA government announced a package for the entire country comprising rescheduling of repayment of outstanding debt over five years with two year moratorium, rescheduling of loans in default, fresh credit for ineligible farmers and such other schemes.
What was the impact – suicides from 2004 and now have merely increased.

So the government decided it needed to intervene again with another financial package - Our PM visited Vidarbha region and announced a package of Rs. 3,750 crore in July 2006.
So as of date around Rs. 30,000 crore or so farm loans have been rescheduled under various schemes.

Surprisingly financial packages never give us an understanding of the co-relation of financial packages to farmer suicides. Did the package in July 2006 help reduce suicides in Vidarbha?

All this brings me to the chapter on suicides in the book Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell.. He talks of a South Pacific island Micronesia where a seventeen year old boy got into an argument with his father, father told him to get out of the house and he then committed suicide. For an island where suicide was unknown in 1960s, by the end of 1980s there were more suicides per capita in Micronesia than anywhere else in the world.

The book says - The central observation of those who study suicide is that in some places and under some circumstances, the act of one person taking his or her own life can be contagious. Suicides lead to suicides. Thus as suicide grows more frequent in these communities the idea itself acquires a certain familiarity if not fascination (to young men in the case of Micronesia) and the lethality of the act seems to be trivialized. Especially among some younger boys, the suicide act appears to have acquired an experimental almost recreational element”
It concludes with - AN ACT THAT HAS BECOME AN IMPORTANT FORM OF SELF EXPRESSION” – people who die in highly publicized suicides – whose deaths give others “permission to die” serve as the Tipping Points in suicide epidemics. – is it then for our Vidarbha farmers?

Well our government only understands financial packages and all we can do is see if Rs. 60,000 crore is the answer to cease farmer suicides.