Showing posts with label Cartoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cartoon. Show all posts

18 May 2014

Sunday Reads - The Narendar Modi Victory Edition

A full-scale NaMo reading edition. Cartoon from Indiatimes.com


  • No Alibis Mandate for Modification, Reforms and 24/7 governance. (New IE)
  • Sonia's real sacrifice: Destroying India to save Rahul. (First Post)
  • Modi must plan the future by tackling the past. (Hindustan Times)
  • Modi's time starts now. (Hindu)
  • What it means to have an uneducated leader. (Live Mint)
  • Modi understood young India better. (Daily Pioneer)
  • Modi promises a second revolution. (Times of India)

20 February 2014

The Telangana Tangle



Its official. India's 29th state, Telangana, is in the making. The Union Cabinet and the Lok Sabha (at the time of writing this, the bill was in Rajya Sabha) have approved the formation of the new state of 'Telangana'. However, the Lok Sabha witnessed unprecedented chaos during the time of the passing of the Telangana bill. Read the below series of articles on the Telangana tangle.






12 September 2013

Black Money Abroad: Can we get it back?

It is common knowledge that wealthy Indians, to avoid paying tax, hide their ill-gotten monies in tax havens abroad. (A tax haven is a country/province/territory with very low rates of tax or no tax at all.) 

According to the latest official data released by the Swiss National Bank (SNB), Switzerland’s central bank, the money Swiss banks owed to Indian clients at the end of last year was 1.42 billion Swiss francs (about Rs9000 crore). This amount is about 35% lower than the 2012 figure of 2.18 billion Swiss francs held by Indians in Swiss banks. Now compare this with the quantum of funds held by Indians in Swiss banks in 2006: a mind-boggling 6.5 billion Swiss francs (over Rs41000 crore).

Please note that this is the illegal booty stashed away in Swiss banks only. It can only be a matter of conjecture as to the total size of the illegal monies kept in secretive bank accounts in tax havens around the world, like Canary Islands and Gibraltar.

As you can see, the amount of black money has been coming down in the last few years. It is likely that Indian account-holders (of black money) in Swiss banks may be withdrawing their monies to deposit them in other tax havens, like Bahamas and Liechtenstein.

One major reason behind this fall is the rise in proactive government action against such black money. The U.S. Government has in the past fined UBS, a leading Swiss bank, a record U.S.$780 million. In fact, to avoid indictment, UBS also turned over names of 4000 American clients who had black money accounts. This also helped the U.S. authorities pursue other banks; it is helpful to know that Wegelin & Co., Switzerland’s oldest bank, with no U.S. offices or personnel, was indicted, which soon led to its closure, ending a nearly 275 year run. 

The SNB figures come at a time when Switzerland-based banks are facing growing pressure from several nations, like the U.S. and Germany, to share client details of their nationals.

It is important to bear in mind one important fact: SNB’s figures (described as ‘liabilities’ of Swiss banks towards their clients from India) do not indicate the quantum of the much-debated alleged black money held by Indians in the safe havens of Switzerland. In fact, SNB’s official figures do not even include the money Indians or others might have in Swiss banks in the names of others.

While the Government of India often talks about unearthing black money held in secretive bank accounts, including with some of the world’s leading commercial banks like UBS, there has been no visible work toward recovering such illegal monies.

Amid allegations of Indians stashing illicit wealth abroad, including in Swiss banks, the Government of India (GoI) has said it is exploring all avenues to recover black money hidden abroad; in case of Switzerland, the GoI has signed a treaty for sharing of information on issues related to tax crimes.

One major reason for the massive fall in hidden wealth is the growing international pressure on Swiss banks to come clean on the name of the clients who have hidden their ill-gotten wealth in those banks.

Source: Satish Acharya
The Economist writes that, “The Swiss government has been seeking an agreement with America that would allow the industry to pay its way out of trouble in one go. Instead, it has had to make do with one covering banks that are not already under investigation, which excludes some of the country’s biggest institutions.

The deal is cleverly structured. Of Switzerland’s 300 banks, 285 will be able to avoid prosecution if they provide certain information about American clients and their advisers, and pay penalties of 20-50% of the clients’ undeclared account balances, depending on when the account was opened and other factors.”

The U.S. Government’s approach toward recovering illegally held monies begets one pertinent question: Why can not the Government of India adopt a similar approach? Why can’t it pursue extraordinary measures to recover the hidden wealth held by Indians, belonging to the political and business classes, in Swiss banks and in other tax havens? If the U.S. and Germany could do it, why can’t India do it? 

A couple of years back the Supreme Court chided the GoI for its evasive action on the recovery of black money. Let me cite some excerpts of the SC judgment on the issue.

“The worries of this Court relate not merely to the quantum of monies said to have been secreted away in foreign banks, but also the manner in which they may have been taken away from the country, and with the nature of activities that may have engendered the accumulation of such monies. The worries of this Court are also with regard to the nature of activities that such monies may engender, both in terms of the concentration of economic power, and also the fact that such monies may be transferred to groups and individuals who may use them for unlawful activities that are extremely dangerous to the nation, including actions against the State.

Source: Satish Acharya
Consequently, the issue of unaccounted monies held by nationals, and other legal entities, in foreign banks, is of primordial importance to the welfare of the citizens. The quantum of such monies may be rough indicators of the weakness of the State, in terms of both crime prevention, and also of tax collection. Depending on the volume of such monies, and the number of incidents through which such monies are generated and secreted away, it may very well reveal the degree of “softness of the State.

“The amount of unaccounted monies, as alleged by the Government of India itself is massive. The show cause notices were issued a substantial length of time ago. The named individuals were very much present in the country. Yet, for unknown, and possibly unknowable, though easily surmisable, reasons the investigations into the matter proceeded at a laggardly pace. Even the named individuals had not yet been questioned with any degree of seriousness. These are serious lapses, especially when viewed from the perspective of larger issues of security, both internal and external, of the country.

“We must express our serious reservations about the responses of the Union of India. In the first instance, during the earlier phases of hearing before us, the attempts were clearly evasive, confused, or originating in the denial mode. It was only upon being repeatedly pressed by us did the Union of India begin to admit that indeed the investigation was proceeding very slowly. It also became clear to us that in fact the investigation had completely stalled, in as much as custodial interrogation of Hassan Ali Khan had not even been sought for, even though he was very much resident in India. Further, it also now appears that even though his passport had been impounded, he was able to secure another passport from the RPO in Patna, possibly with the help or aid of a politician.” (End of excerpt; read the complete verdict here.) 

The SC verdict exposes the hollowness of the government's proclaimed intent of recovering black money stashed abroad. I think it boils down to one simple thing: political will. And as we know, in our country, there is simply not enough political will to punish the law-breakers. What else can we expect from a government which itself in embroiled in a slew of scams and which goes to great lengths to protect its corrupt ministers/leaders/MPs/MLAs? 

25 August 2013

Sunday Reads - Smart/stupid and falling rupee

This cartoon from The Hindu  brilliantly captures what's wrong with our Parliament and the economy.

  • How the Egyptian god Bes gave the Christian Devil his looks. (BBC Culture)
  • How being called smart can actually make you stupid. (Big Think)
  • The falling Rupee, theory of political hawala and persistent pre-poll profligacy. (New Indian Express)
  • Nuclear deterrence is overrated. (The Hindu

30 June 2013

Sunday Reads - Man at Work & The Inspirational Imax Boss

After a two-week break, including a nine-day vacation, I am back to blogging. Let me start with Sunday Reads.
  • Rich Gelfond: Imax boss who started off shining shoes. (BBC)
  • What possessed him? Rajat Gupta's Great Fall and America's Indian Elites. (The Financialist
  • Man at work, business as usual. (New Indian Express)
  • I don't see China becoming a superpower in this century: Timothy Beardson (Economic Times)

The Economist
 has a terrific cartoon on the Edward Snowden affair, with the U.S. (Uncle Sam) and Russia (Bear) engaging in a diplomatic war of words.






02 June 2013

Sunday Reads Late Edition

The Hindu


The Hindu's Open Page
has an interesting collection of anecdotes. Here's one:

Atal Bihari Vajpayee was another politician who regaled audiences with his humorous remarks. During an election meeting in Gujarat, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi told the gathering that she was a daughter of Uttar Pradesh and daughter-in-law of Gujarat and was seeking votes on that basis. Vajpayee later said Mrs. Gandhi had forgotten to say that she was also the mother-in-law of Italy. The audience had a hearty laugh and one journalist later wrote that this humorous remark of Vajpayee had brought the BJP a lot of votes.

Read the complete piece here

26 May 2013

Sunday Reads - Survivors & Prostitution in Deep Recession


  • Prostitution: An industry that is deep in recession. (Economist)
  • Survivors: Filthy and violent it may be, but life is still precious for the world's street children. Can you look them in the eye? (Aeon)
  • From IPL spot-fixing to political cop outs, why India has lost faith in its systems. (First Post)
  • Five reasons why rupee is depreciating despite record FII flows (Economic Times

Source: DNA

19 May 2013

Sunday Reads - Jolie, Propaganda, IPL, & the Internet


I am travelling today to Jodhpur (Rajasthan); I hope I do not get skewered in the terrible heat of the desert.
  • Propaganda: Lies and distortion. (BBC)
  • The Internet killed the Middle Class. (Salon)
  • Corporatisation of Angelina Jolie's breasts? (Outlook)
  • The seamier side of IPL: Women and money. (India Today)

As the IPL spot-fixing unravels, Manjul's cartoon in DNA captures it all.



14 May 2013

Politics Behind Team Selection

In this IPL season, it looks like the whole country is busy with the on-field and off-the-field shenanigans of national and international cricketers.

There are numerous considerations in the selection of players to represent the nation: performance, age, regionalism, favoritism, and nepotism. Yesterday, I read a piece in the Pakistani newspaper, Dawn, about the politics behind the selection of cricketers for the Pakistan national team.

Here’s an excerpt:

Pakistan cricket is probably filled with the most inspired, interesting, frustrating, amusing, baffling incidents of selection than any other country.
...

Though consideration of religion should be far removed from the arts and sport, if not from every profession and walk of life, it is a fact that there is a clash of civilisations and religion, race, caste and colour — undeniable catalysts.
...

Imran Khan has himself documented in his autobiography that he was selected purely on nepotism; his cousins Javed Burki and Majid Khan were the main reasons he made it into the squad for the 1971 tour of England. According to him he didn’t even have a proper bowling run-up and wrote that if it had not been for his cousins he wouldn’t have been on the plane.
(End of excerpt)

Looks like there are at least a few things, apart from mutual distrust and hatred, that connect us with Pakistan. Cricket is one such thing. 

To read more about the politics behind team selection, click here

manjul.com



14 April 2013

Sunday Reads - An executioner's tale & Replacing the $


Sunday Reads series is back after a really long time.
  • What sparks prejudice in humans. (BBC)
  • An executioner's tale from Yemen. (TIME)
Source: DNA


17 February 2013

Sunday Reads - Currency Wars & Bush's Great Work

Resuming the Sunday Reads series.

  • How Wrestling lost the Olympics. (NYT
  • What George W. Bush did right. (Foreign Policy)
  • From Kashmir, a very different perspective on Afzal Guru's hanging. (Outlook)
  • Root causes of currency wars. (Voxeu)

Another defence scam has come emerged. This one involves the purchase of helicopters for India VVIPs. Here's some lowdown, including the below brilliant cartoon, from India Today.



30 September 2012

Sunday Reads - India Special Edition


Walk through the Amul Cartoon Factory in Wall Street Journal's interesting piece

The Economist
has a cover story on India, claiming that the country is in search of a dream. Also watch this video story. 


In his Foreign Policy piece titled India, Meet the Icarus Peter Passell warns that "why no one should be surprised that the emerging economic superpower is getting cut back to size". 

Meanwhile, the Times of India says that India is lending Mayawati and ND Tiwari to Afghanistan. The story comes with a footnote: This piece bears no connection to events and characters in real life.
Former UP chief minister Mayawati, who bears a striking resemblance to some strange statues found all over the state, is in the news again. The central government has decided to loan Behenji to Afghanistan to help the state rebuild statues destroyed in the war. 
When asked why she didn't want to go, the former CM is said to have rued the lack of money-making opportunities in the region as well as a shortage of cash garlands. 
Read the complete story here.



31 May 2012

Mid-Week Reads - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas






  • South Africa under apartheid in the 1970s. I will use just one word to describe this  audio-visual story: Brilliant. (BBC)
  • Jagan Mohan Reddy lied to EC on assets. (First Post) Also read ‘Father’s sins catch up with YS Jagan’



27 May 2012

Sunday Reads - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



  • Six reasons why the rupee is falling. (BBC)
  • What-if and what-is: The role of Speculation in Science. (NYT)
  • Emperor Akbar shares his secrets of power. (ETAlso check out this list of India’s most powerful CEOs. (ET

Source: Economic Times



13 May 2012

Sunday Reads - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



Four highly varied and interesting reads for your Sunday. 


  • The French government wants to tone my vagina. (Slate)
Shortly after my husband and I moved to Paris, I became pregnant, which was a relief, because I would get fat for a legitimate biological reason, not just because of all the pain au chocolat. When I gave birth to our daughter last November, my husband and I spent five government-sponsored days in the maternity ward at Clinique Leonardo Da Vinci, where we learned that French hospital meals come with a cheese course and that as part of my postpartum treatment I would be prescribed 10 to 20 sessions of la rééducation périnéale. This is a kind of physical therapy designed to retrain the muscles of the pelvic floor, including the vagina, and is one of the cornerstones of French postnatal care. Two months after our daughter was born, I summoned the courage to teach my vagina some new tricks.
... two theories in physics, eternal inflation and string theory, now suggest that the same fundamental principles from which the laws of nature derive may lead to many different self-consistent universes, with many different properties. It is as if you walked into a shoe store, had your feet measured, and found that a size 5 would fit you, a size 8 would also fit, and a size 12 would fit equally well. Such wishy-washy results make theoretical physicists extremely unhappy. Evidently, the fundamental laws of nature do not pin down a single and unique universe. According to the current thinking of many physicists, we are living in one of a vast number of universes. We are living in an accidental universe. We are living in a universe uncalculable by science. 
    • Why is Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet so popular? (BBC)
    Gibran on marriage: "Love one another but make not a bond of love: Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls. Fill each other's cup but drink not from one cup." 
    • Decadence and the IPL, by Mukul Kesavan. (ToI)
    ... is not just exasperating but decadent is that the people who run the IPL and the journalists who cover it, seem to positively celebrate the fact that IPL teams are playthings of the rich and famous. One could argue that Chelsea is a toy for Abramovitch, but no commentator, no television camera pays him any attention in the course of live action. Whereas Vijay Mallya and his son and Mukesh Ambani and his family are as much a part of the IPL's action as Chris Gayle or Sachin Tendulkar. When purse-strings become visible in and around the field of play, you know that a sport is in trouble because it isn't lit only by its own brilliance, it's now also lit by the reflected glare of money.   

    Source: The Economic Times


    06 May 2012

    Sunday Reads - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



    Presenting four exceptionally brilliant articles for your reading.


    • The story of a fugitive. (GQ
      I eat with Wright and Rosário. I finish a dozen pancakes, maybe more. I ask Rosário how she's been able to handle the situation. She responds with a question of her own: How long have you been with your wife? Ten years, I tell her, and she calls me a "rookie." She says I couldn't even begin to understand the depth and power and complexity of love in such a short period of time. She's been with Wright for thirty-three years.

    • America: Christians, gays and bullying (The Economist)
      ... people who justify anti-gay bigotry by brandishing a Bible but ignore other, less convenient biblical prohibitions (the list might also include mixed fabrics and divorce) are hypocrites.

    • Here's why Google and Facebook might completely disappear in the next five years. (Forbes)
      Fortunes will be made by those who adapt to and invest in this complete greenfield. Those who own the future are going to be the ones who create it. It’s all up for grabs. Web monopolies are not as sticky as the monopolies of old.  

    • The terrible price of a Korean defection. (BBC)
      For Shin and her two daughters, Oh's defection was catastrophic. They were taken to Yodok concentration camp, where the North Korean government imprisons its enemies. The conditions in this slave labour camp are reportedly as bad as anything in Nazi Germany or Stalin's Gulag. The realisation that he could not get back in touch with his family was devastating. "By that time I had completely given up. My whole body was just broken down." 

    A First Post cartoon reflecting the current pathetic state of affairs in India's political realm.

    22 April 2012

    Sunday Reads - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



    Some interesting reads for today.

    • The Third Industrial Revolution: Two articles from the Economist. (Here and here)
    • Lights and shadows: Why do we see elephants on Mars? (AlJazeera)
    • India's deadly military build-up: A slideshow (FP)

    Check this newspaper ad taken out by a sycophantic Congressman (hey, that's some redundancy!); with these kinds of leaders, the INC is doomed to go down.






    05 April 2012

    Thursday Readings - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



    Evening reads for you!

    • The PIIGS countries - Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain - are facing an unprecedented crisis. Brilliant piece on how these countries are hanging from a precipice. (Project Syndicate)
    • Under its Project Glass, Google unveils reality glasses that places information over the view from the users' right eye. (BBC)
    • Rural India is the next big tourist destination. (Reuters)

    Manjul of DNA
    brillianty captures the false news involving the Indian Army staging a coup against a civilian government; misplaced priorities of our defence ministry have left the brilliant Indian Army with technically-advanced weaponry but with no basic ammunition.


    01 April 2012

    7 Sunday Readings - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas


    Sunday readings for you!
    • Israel has gained access to airbases in Azerbaijan. Is the secular Muslim-dominated country of Azerbaijan turning into Israel's staging ground in the war against Iran? (Foreign Policy)
    • “Business has really become the de facto substitute for Indian diplomatic engagement. And that works out nicely for India.” The growing role of India's private sector in determining the country's foreign policy. (New York Times)
    • Nothing gives a man more of a sense of purpose, and there remains nothing more dignified, than hauling yourself out of bed and going to work. But some of those jobs that went away in the recession — some whole professions — are never coming back. What happens when you lose your job? (Esquire)
    • Realpolitik, economic interests, ideals and the quest for freedom will shape the great game playing out in Myanmar, says Jaswant Singh, India's former foreign minister. (Al-Jazeera)
    • The rise and fall of the world's most dangerous arms dealer. (New Yorker)
    • Sharda Ugra says that the Bharat Ratna is bestowed for a lifetime of dedicated work to a cause. And so, Sachin Tendulkar will have to wait. (Outlook)
    Last week, the Government of India stopped the death sentence of Balwant Singh Rajoana, the killer of former Punjab chief minister, Beant Singh. In some sense this government action reflects the pursuit of communal politics, even at the cost of national security. Sudhir Tailang caricatures votebank politics in this brilliant cartoon. 

    25 March 2012

    Sunday Readings - The Best of Politics, Economics, & Ideas



    Good reads for your Sunday!

    • Google has always claimed to put the interests of the user first. It's worth questioning whether or not that's still the case. Has Google reached a point where it must be evil? The case against Google. (Gizmodo)
    • American students struggle to repay their loans, as their debts top U.S.$1 trillion. (Bloomberg)
    • Fresh-water shortages and more droughts and floods will increase the likelihood that water will be used as a weapon between states or to further terrorist aims in key strategic areas, including the Middle East, South Asia and North Africa, a U.S. intelligence assessment says. (Washington Post)
    • Six big lies about Israel runs the United States. (Foreign Policy)
    • Is India back to the rickshaw rate of growth? (The Economist)
    • Security analysts have been asking whether French intelligence missed vital clues about Mohamed Merah that might have prevented his attacks or stopped him earlier. (BBC)
    • Sachin Tendulkar and the burden of the 100th Century. (Cricinfo)

    Sunday Bonus

    • The Year's Best Military Photography. (FP
    • B-School students are opting for internship with BJP, CPM, and other parties. (ET)
    The cartoon below from Sudhir Tailang shows the chicanery behind the UPA government's claim of having reducing poverty numbers substantially.