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Mahadevan's Monologues - He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches.
Mahadevan  Venkitasubbiar
Author:Mahadevan Venkitasubbiar
Insurance Broker
SHINING SPOTS AND AREAS OF DARKNESS
Wednesday 06th, August 2008

Steve Ballmer, the Microsoft Chief, during his last visit to India, said that one third of the software engineers in the world would claim India as their home. In sheer rate of economic growth, India is one of the super powers today and by 2020, India is likely to brush shoulders with China, if not brush her aside. An Indian wins Nobel Prize and another Booker Prize and a third Indian, Jagdish Bhagwati, was short listed for Nobel Prize in Economics. If we wielded the Hockey stick with great wizardry a few decades earlier as demonstrated by Dhyanchand, today we are the acknowledged Kings of Steel ingots. We feel elated and announce it from the housetop that we have arrived.

Steve Ballmer also said that Indian supply of Technocrats and Scientists for Research and Development was too short of the need and demand. Chemistry Graduates, Civil and Aerospace engineers send their CVs to software Companies. If the Business Schools and software companies ensnare the bright, the lower end among the educated finds solace in BPOs and undergo cultural transformation. In the process, educational institutions do not get quality faculties and research institutions are deprived of dedicated men and woman to do research. Research scientists are odd men out everywhere. Indian Manufacturers complain that they do not get quality engineers.

It is no doubt true that the four leading software companies alone employ a little over three lakhs knowledge workers across the globe. But the vast army of the unemployed in the rural areas does not belong to this class. The intellectual calibre of the rural boys and girls is certainly not inferior. What they lack is self confidence and communication skill in English, two attributes needed for success in Software and BPOs. Chinese are aware of their limitations in English and therefore, they used their work force for building infrastructure and manufacture. If India is the back office to the world, China provides the shop floor. Now they have turned towards software too.

Prof. Indiresan, a former Director of Madras IIT, maintains that the millions of uneducated in India need to be provided jobs in the condition in which they are and there is no short term course to transform them. Emphasis on manufacture and infrastructure alone can provide millions of jobs. A Mittal buying the Arcelors may be headlines for the newspapers. But a Parameswaran at Palakkad continues to be unemployed. Only more deployment of Capital in India by our entrepreneurs and the foreign ones would create jobs for our millions who are otherwise not employable. Thirty years of Communist rule made China a disciplined country. That discipline stands them in good stead today when they have switched over to an alternative and more rewarding economy. In India, we did not cultivate that discipline. We have arm chair critics pointing fingers at what they call bourgeoisie culture. And yet we too can do like China, even if it takes a little longer, by emulating them. Be conscious of your strength, and yet understand your weakness too. .

When our builders build life style houses, let the government make them to build small functional and less expensive houses, for the poor too, as demonstrated by the 82 years young Jimmi Carter. The textile mills in Mumbai, which provided jobs to over one and a half lakhs of skilled and semi-skilled workers have now yielded place to marble floored palatial apartments, malls and multiplexes, depriving the mill workers of their wages and roofs.

Distracters thrive, when there is dissatisfaction around. Let us light the areas of darkness. ‘Diyas’ are meant for that.

 
Comments
Comment 1: By Dr. Vardarajan Rengarajan on 08th Aug 2008
India has enough resources and human power (both technical and non technical)But the problem is sometimes they are over ambitious and over confident over their strength resulting a wide gap between the rich and the poor. As rightly pointed out by the author, India failed to cultivate discipline like that of China did.Lack of discipline and non adherence of ethical and moral values will hamper India's development if not its growth . The need of the hour is therefore to concentrate on spirtual development for inculcation of discipline synthsised with other socio economic political development in India which would go a long way in addressing the'inequity' syndrome.
Dr.V.Rengarajan

Comment 2: By Heather Sarin on 08th Aug 2008
The poor have to fight for their daily bread and their souls continue to bleed. Mittals and Birlas and Modis may enjoy a palatial life style but it hardly helps the suffering majority in India. I totally agree with the writer and urge the privileged few to Light up the areas of Darkness. Tagoreji writes," The lamp contains its oil, which it holds securely in its close grasp and guards from the least loss. Thus is it separate from all other objects around it and is miserly. But when lighted it finds its meaning at once; its relation with all things far and near is established, and it freely sacrifices its fund of oil to feed the flame."

Heather



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