Monday, March 13, 2017

Even though #Holi is Jains Function.. Dam Sure we all have crazy to celebrate #Holi.......#Happy_Holi Dear FrndsDesigned by Ragavan Mani — celebrating this special day.

Holi Messages

People celebrate Holi by throwing balloons and colors on one another, gorging on delicacies and remembering the inspiring story of Prahlada. It is a day of fun and rejoicing. So, add more colors to the day of your loved ones by sending across some wonderful Holi messages. Here you would find plenty of eloquent messages that would surely bring a smile on the faces of your loved ones.
A true and caring relation doesn't have to speak loud, a soft sms is just enough to express the heartiest feelings. Enjoy the festival of Holi with lots of fun.

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Yamaha FZ25 on INR 1,19,500 (on-road)

Yamaha FZ25 priced at INR 1,29,500  (on-road)


The Yamaha FZ25 comes as a fresh offering for this year, from Yamaha. This is the first launch from the Japanese automaker in 2017. Yamaha wants to challenge competition right from the start, as there will new bikes from TVS and BMW also launching soon, in the same segment. The Yamaha FZ25 will be a new bike that will be competing with the other 250/300 cc bikes. The Yamaha FZ25 seems to be promising quite promising. It is an all new bike and it is here to impress riding enthusiasts.

Yamaha is also working on its top-down strategy as well. First came the Saluto (125cc), then the Saluto RX (110cc), next in line is the 100cc bike too. At the same time, the company doesn’t wants to keep the enthusiast riders waiting. The R3 had made an entry last year. Now, it is time for the Yamaha FZ25. More details on this new bike. Read further.







Yamaha FZ25 Price in India

Price (on-road)
Minimum          INR 1,19,500 lakhs





Yamaha FZ25 Design

The new bike has good road presence. It doest have a subtle design like the Yamaha R3. It does come with LED headlamps and daytime running LEDs, muscular fuel tank with sculptures. The front of the bike looks muscular and this is what Yamaha has been using in its teaser as well. There is a large headlamp along with stylish tank shrouds. This makes the bike look bigger and muscular. The stepped seat seems to be wide enough for two people to sit comfortably. As the R15 V2 wasn’t very comfortable for the pillion, it seems Yamaha has made the necessary changes to make the bike appealing. The bike is extremely light as it weighs a mere 148 kilograms.  This is because its a diamond shaped chassis, which is light. This enhances performance and mileage both.

White Color



Engine type Air cooled, 4-stroke, SOHC, 2-valve
Cylinder arrangement Single cylinder
Displacement 249cm3
Bore & stroke 74.0×58.0mm
Compression ratio 9.8:1
Maximum horse power 15.4kW(20.9PS)/8000r/min
Maximum torque 20.0N・m(2.0kgf・m)/6000r/min
Starting system type Electric starter
Lubrication system Wet sump
Engine oil capacity 1.55 litre

A single-cylinder 250cc engine powers the Yamaha FZ25. This is the company’s all new engine for India. Producing about 20bhp of power, this engine has more than sufficient grunt. The maximum torque for this engine is 20Nm. The engine is mated to a six-speed gearbox. There will SOHC, fuel-injection and even two-valves. This engine is the most powerful 250cc one, currently. The Yamaha FZ25 shall not just offer more power but even good riding dynamics too. At the moment, there is no ABS. Yamaha claims at the moment there is no need for ABS and the brakes are good enough. 

Yamaha FZ25 Top Speed

Model Top Speed
Yamaha FZ25 130 km/hr
We reckon the the Yamaha FZ25 should have a top speed of close to 130km/hr. This should be apt for a bike of this caliber. The bike won’t just have good performance and top speed but even well-spaced gear ratios.

Black Color

Yamaha FZ25 Mileage
City 35 km/l
Highway 40 km/l
We expect the Yamaha FZ25 to have a mileage of about 35 km/l in the city and close to 40 km/l on the highway. Yamaha performance bikes are bred for better performance, and fuel-efficiency won’t be the most important thing for a potential buyer. Still we shall be looking forward to getting you real world fuel efficiency. The company claims that the mileage should be about 43 km/l. 

Yamaha FZ25 Safety Features

This Yamaha FZ25 has front and rear disc brakes. However, what will make it different will the bite of the brakes. Having ridden several Yamaha bikes, we are sure that this bike will have good brakes. At the moment, there is no ABS on offer. Not even single-channel. It will be made mandatory only when the new rule is passed in 2018. 

Yamaha FZ25 Competition

The Yamaha FZ25 will be competing with the KTM Duke 200, Benelli TNT 25, Honda CBR 250R and even the upcoming Hero HX250. These will be the direct competing bikes with the Yamaha 250cc bike.


Blue Color


Yamaha FZ25 Dimensions

Overall length 2015mm
Overall width 770mm
Overall height 1075mm
Seat height 795mm
Wheelbase 1360mm
Minimum ground clearance 160mm
Wet(with oil and a full fuel tank) 148kg
Yamaha FZ25 Brakes

Brake type(Front) Hydraulic single disc brake
Brake type(Rear) Hydraulic single disc brake
Diameter of  brake disk(Front) 282mm
Diameter of  brake disk(Rear) 220mm
Inside diameter of drum / Effective radius of disc(Front) 257mm
Inside diameter of drum / Effective radius of disc(Rear) 191mm

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Nokia 6 sold out in first 60 seconds


Nokia 6 sold out in first 60 seconds during flash sale in China : Report


Nokia 6's first flash sale in China sees the smartphone going out of stock within the first minute of availability

Nokia 6

The first flash sale of Nokia 6 smartphone in China resulted in the phone going out of stock within a minute after it became available on the Chinese e-commerce portal JD.com as reported by Anzhao. However, it unknown as to how many devices were available for purchase in the first flash sale.


The device which is being manufactured by HMD Global, but with the Nokia branding has seen
tremendous popularity in China (the only market it is currently available in), and has seen over 
one million registrations since January 4.

Nokia 6 is the first device to carry the Finnish giant’s name after it decided to get back in the smartphone market. The phone’s tremendous popularity shows that the customer loyalty of Nokia has stood the test of time, and could be a sign of come back for the age-old brand. Nokia 6 was able to garner more than 2,50,000 registrations in just the first 24 hours of availability and then crossed 1 million registrations ahead of the sale.
Nokia 6 comes with a 5.5-inch full HD display that sports a 2.5 Gorilla Glass protection. A Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 processor powers the device, which is coupled with 4GB RAM and 64GB of storage (expandable to 128GB via microSD). On the camera front, Nokia 6 packs a 16MP rear unit with an f/2.0 aperture along with an 8MP front shooter.
The phone is backed by a 3000 mAh battery and sports connectivity via Wi-Fi, USB-OTG, GPS and Bluetooth 4.1. Nokia 6 will be running Android 7.0 Nougat and feature Dolby Atmos technology. The phone is priced at 1,699 Yuan (approx. Rs 16,000).
HMD Global is also set for an event at MWC 2017, where it is expected to announce more Nokia smartphones.

Monday, January 23, 2017

வைரமுத்து கவிதை


வணக்கம் எழுத்து தோழமைகளே ! 
படிக்க படிக்க திகட்டாதவை வடுகபட்டி கண்டெடுத்த வைரமாம் "வைரமுத்து " அவர்களின் கவிதைகள் . 

பலர் படித்திருக்கலாம் பலர் படிக்காமல் இருந்திருக்கலாம் .படிக்காதோர் பயனுரவும் படித்தோர் மீண்டும் வரிகளை அசைபோட்டுக்கொள்ளவும் இதோ எனது குருநாதன் வைரமுத்து அவர்களின் படைப்புகள் சிலவற்றை உங்களோடு பகிர்ந்துகொள்வதில் பெருமை கொள்கிறேன்.தொடர்ச்சியாக எனக்கு பிடித்த சில படைப்புகளை உங்களுக்காக அளிக்கிறேன் விரும்பிய தோழமைகள் படித்து பயனுற மட்டுமே.. 

உலகம் உன்னைப் பார்த்து ------ 

உன்னைப் பார்த்து உலகம் 
உரைக்கும் 
தன்னம்பிக்கை தளரவிடாதே ! 

இரட்டைப் பேச்சு பேசும் 
உலகம் 
மிரட்டும் தம்பி மிரண்டுவிடாதே ! 

ஒவ்வொரு வாயிலும் 
ஒற்றை நாக்கு 
உலகின் வாயில் இரட்டை நாக்கு ! 

எனக்கு நேர்ந்த இழிமொழி எல்லாம் 
உனக்கு சொல்கிறேன் 
உள்ளத்தில் எழுது ! 

இன்னிசைத் தமிழை எளிமை செய்தேன் 
இலக்கியம் இல்லை 
லேகியம் என்றது ! 

திரைப்பாட்டுக்குள் செழுந்தமிழ் செய்தேன் 
பரிமேலழகரை 
வரச்சொல் என்றது ! 

குறுந்தொகை கம்பன் கொட்டி முழக்கினேன் 
குண்டுச் சட்டியில் 
குதிரை என்றது ! 

எலியட், நெருடா எல்லாம் சொன்னேன் 
திறமை எல்லாம் 
திருடியதென்றது ! 

எளிய தோற்றமே இயல்பென இருந்தேன் 
வடுக பட்டி 
வழியுது என்றது ! 

அழகாய் நானும் ஆடைகள் கொண்டேன் 
கழுதைக் கெதற்கு 
கண்மை என்றது ! 

மேடையில் கால்மேல் காலிட்டமர்ந்தேன் 
படித்த திமிர்தான் 
பணிவில்லை என்றது ! 

மூத்தோர் வந்ததும் முதலில் எழுந்தேன் 
கவிஞன் அல்ல 
காக்கா என்றது ! 

உயர்ந்தோர் பெருமை உவந்து புகழ்ந்தேன் 
காதில் பூ வைக்கிறான் 
கவனம் என்றது ! 

விரல்நகத்தளவு விமர்சனம் செய்தேன் 
அரிவாள் எடுக்கிறான் 
ஆபத்து என்றது ! 

மற்றவர் சூழ்ச்சியால் மண்ணில் விழுந்தேன் 
புத்தி கொழுத்தவன் 
புதைந்தான் என்றது ! 

மூச்சுப் பிடித்து முட்டி முழைத்தேன் 
தந்திரக்காரன் 
தள்ளிநில் என்றது ! 

பகையைக் கண்டு பைய நகர்ந்தேன் 
பயந்துவிட்டான் 
பாவம் என்றது ! 

மோதி மிதித்து முகத்தில் உமிழ்ந்தேன் 
விளங்கிவிட்டதா ? 
மிருகம் என்றது ! 

பணத்தில் பொருளில் பற்றற்று இருந்தேன் 
வறுமையின் விந்துவில் 
பிறந்தவன் என்றது ! 

என்னை தேய்த்து மண்டபம் கட்டினேன் 
புலவன் இல்லை 
பூர்ஷ்வா என்றது ! 

சொந்த ஊரிலே துளிநிலம் இல்லை 
இவனா ? 
மண்ணின் மைந்தன் என்றது ! 

தென்னை மரங்கள் தேடி வாங்கினேன் 
பண்ணையார் ஆனான் 
பாமரன் என்றது ! 

கயவர் கேட்டார் காசு மறுத்தேன் 
கறக்க முடியா 
கஞ்சன் என்றது ! 

உண்மை இருந்தால் உறுபொருள் கொடுத்தேன் 
உதறித்திறியும் 
ஊதாரி என்றது ! 

மங்கயரிடையே மௌனம் காத்தேன் 
கவிஞன் என்ற 
கர்வம் என்றது ! 

பெண்கள் சிலருடன் பேசத்தொடங்கினேன் 
கண்களை கவனி 
காமம் என்றது ! 

திசைகள்தோறும் தேதி கொடுத்தேன் 
ஐயோ புகழுக்கு 
அலைகிறான் என்றது ! 

நேரக்குறைவு நிறுத்திக்கொண்டேன் 
கணக்குப் பார்க்கிறான் 
கவிஞன் என்றது ! 

அப்படி இருந்தால் அதுவும் தப்பு , 
இப்படி இருந்தால் 
இதுவும் தப்பு . 

கத்தும் நாய்க்கு காரணம் வேண்டாம் 
தன் நிழல் பார்த்து 
தானே குரைக்கும் . 

உலகின் வாயைத் தைத்திடு அல்லது 
இரண்டு செவிகளை 
இறுக்கி மூடிடு ! 

உலகின் வாயைத் தைப்பது கடினம் 
உந்தன் செவிகளை 
மூடுதல் சுலபம்........................................................

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Don't drink Coca Cola

This is what happens to your body when you drink Coca Cola

We all know fizzy drinks like Coca Cola are loaded with sugar, but do you really know what happens to your body when you glug a can of the sweet stuff?



Based on research by health writer Wade Meredith, it explains that a 330ml can of Coca Cola contains so much sugar, your body should vomit - but the phosphoric acid "cuts the flavor", helping you keep the liquid down.
After 40 minutes, your blood sugar has spiked, your pupils dilated, and your blood pressure has risen.
The body starts to produce more dopamine, a neurotransmitter that controls the brain's pleasure centres - "physically the same way heroin works, by the way".
By the time the hour is up, you will want to urinate, and start to have a sugar crash, making you drowsy and irritable.
"You’ve also now, literally, p***** away all the water that was in the Coke. But not before infusing it with valuable nutrients your body could have used for things like hydrating your system, or building strong bones and teeth," the account concludes.
The infographic's creator, former UK pharmarcist Niraj Naik, says that this pattern "applies to pretty much most caffeinated soft drinks, not just Coke.
"If you care about your heart, health and mind then please remember this article next time you reach for that bottle."
A Coca-Cola spokesperson said: “People have enjoyed drinking a Coca-Cola for more than 129 years. Like all soft drinks, it is perfectly safe to drink and can be enjoyed as part of a balanced diet and lifestyle. We provide a choice of colas to meet the needs of different consumers, including options that are lower sugar, sugar free and caffeine free.”

An infographic which reveals the disturbing effect Coke has within an hour of entering your system has gone viral. 

இன்று இளைஞர்களால் .... 💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪

இன்று இளைஞர்களால் ....
💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪
மெரினா - மிரண்டது 
அலங்காநல்லூர் - அலறியது 
சிவகங்கை - சீறியது 
தஞ்சை - தகர்ந்தது
திருநெல்வேலி - திணறியது
சிதம்பரம் - சிதறியது
O.M.R - உயர்ந்தது
கோவை - கொண்டாடியது
விருதுநகர் - விளையாடியது
ராமநாதபுரம் - ரணகளமானது
பெரம்பலூர் - பெண்டு கழண்டது
தேனி - தெறித்தது
திருப்பூர் - திருந்தியது
பொள்ளாச்சி - பொளந்துகட்டியது
வேலூர் - வேட்டையாடியது
காஞ்சிபுரம் - கர்ஜித்தது
நாகை - நடுங்கியது
திருவள்ளூர் - திமிறியது
அரியலூர் - அமர்க்களமானது
புதுக்கோட்டை - புறப்பட்டது
திருச்சி - திருப்பு முனையாகியது
நீலகிரி - நின்றது
ஈரோடு - எழுந்தது
நாமக்கல் - நடனமாடியது
சேலம் - செழித்தது
திருவாரூர் - திளைத்தது
திருவண்ணாமலை - திருவிழாவாகியது
தர்மபுரி - தத்தளித்தது
கரூர் - கலக்கியது
கிருஷ்ணகிரி - கிறுகிறுத்தது
கன்னியாகுமரி - கரகாட்டமாடியது
விழுப்புரம் - வீறுகொண்டது
திண்டுக்கல் - திசை மாறியது
மதுரை - மலர்ந்தது
தமிழகம் - தலை நிமிர்ந்தது!
💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

support of Jallikattu on Chennai's Marina Beach

Massive protests in support of Jallikattu on Chennai's Marina Beach

Police had a tough time managing the massive crowd of over 5000 people who had gathered in response to social media posters and invited to support the cause of Jallikattu.



Chennai, Jan 17 Evening : Condemning the arrests of hundreds in Alanganallur of Madurai on Tuesday morning, thousands of people gathered at Marina Beach of Chennai. Youngsters and seniors alike, close to 5000 people, gathered to condemn the crackdown on 'peaceful' protestors at Madurai in support of the 'traditional sport'. The massive crowd turned to mobile light protest to attract attention prompting more people to join in the protests.



Police had a tough time managing the massive crowd of over 5000 people who had gathered in response to social media posters and invited to support the cause of Jallikattu. The protest in Chennai was aimed at sending out the message that Jallikattu was not an issue restricted to rural Tamil Nadu but mattered to all in the state .


Meanwhile, posters of protests continue to be shared widely online. Many posters and messages asking students to boycott college in support on Jallikattu on Wednesday is doing the rounds in Tamil Nadu. The protests come in the background of attempts to organise the banned sport in Tamil Nadu forcing authorities to crackdown on those responsible for it. Tuesday also saw people, including policemen, being injured by bulls running helter-skelter during attempts by cops to drive people away from a Jallikattu venue in Madurai.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Pongal Wishes

Pongal Wishes Messages and Pongal Greetings



Pongal Festival and Celebrations

Pongal or Thai Pongal is the festival is celebrated on southern Indian states and Sri Lanka. Even though it is celebrated in all states of south India, it is celebrated in Tamil Nadu as a holiday and it is the one of the prominent festival of that state along with Diwali and Tamil New year Day. You can find a collection of heart warming Pongal Wishes below!!. Please browse through and send Pongal messages to your dears and nears
Thai Pongal is actually a the harvest festival and it is celebrated in 3 or 4 days. On the Thai Pongal Day people make good food, offer puja to gods and Sun for helping for good harvest, and praying for better harvest next year also. They believe by showing the thanks and offering the prayers gods will become happy and will bless them with a good harvest for next year also.
As normal greeting cards are taken a prominent role in pongal festival as the tamilians living in abroad send pongal greetings to their friends and relatives.

Happy Pongal Wishes and Messages

May this auspicious festival bring you
Overflowing happiness, joy and prosperity
Wishing you a blessed and happy Pongal!
May the SWEETNESS of overflowing milk and sugarcane
Fill your home with harmony and happiness
Wishing you the best and prosperous Pongal!
The sun shines bright
To guide and lead us the way
Towards bountiful harvest season
May you be blessed with prosperity and joy
Happy Pongal!
Wishing you a festival that will bring you prosperity and good luck
A joyous and blessed one as well that will bring you joy and happiness.
Have a prosperous and happy Pongal!
Celebrate this day with a heart
Filled with cheer and fervor
Sending my warmest greetings to you
And to your family and loved ones this Pongal.
Pongalo Pongal!
I pray that this festival may be the start of your brighter days
Filled with happiness, good luck and prosperity.
Happy Pongal!

Monday, January 9, 2017

India’s demonetization policy fails

India’s demonetization policy fails to address real problems


The government of India’s decision to demonetize nearly 86% of the circulating currency in the name of fighting corruption and black money has had a huge adverse impact causing chaos and unrest in rural and urban India.

On November 22, the members of the Aam Aadmi (‘common man’) Party (AAP) led by Arvind Kejriwal, chief minister of Delhi ‘gheraoed’ (‘encircled’) India’s Parliament and demanded an immediate scrapping of demonetization. Kejriwal accused the Prime Minister of having centralized all power in his hands without adequate consultation with stakeholders with no preparation for proper implementation of the policy.

The Trinamool Congress (TMC) party, led by Mamata Banerji, chief minister of West Bengal was expected to follow up.

The demonetization move of the central government came as a surprise and shock to the people of India. It appeared to be a decision taken by the Prime Minister alone without adequate planning and preparation. Even the Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, whose role is crucial for the successful implementation of the government policy in this regard, seemed to have been kept out of the consultation process.

The suffering of a vast number of people standing patiently in serpentine queues in front of banks and Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs) for withdrawing their own money despite the cash crunch, was captured on TV screens and in newspaper reports. However, the emerging unrest over the issue has not yet fully manifested itself except for instances of violence.

This undemocratic and non-transparent approach has harmed the process and was a major setback for the Narendra Modi government in New Delhi, potentially capable of destabilizing it.

Parties other than the AAP and the TMC are also deeply concerned about demonetization but are working towards serious plans to deal with the problem within and outside Parliament.

On November 17, AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal and TMC leader Mamata Banerji along with their supporters, held a massive rally for traders, farmers and laborers at the Azadpur ‘mandi’ (‘market’), reportedly the biggest such market in Asia and addressed their concerns. They have also met the President of India and articulated the serious concerns of the affected public especially peasants, workers, traders and others in the country.

The Prime Minister made his dramatic announcement to demonetize high value currency in a TV address to the nation on November 8.

The result has been that millions have lost precious work hours to queue up at banks to exchange their old notes; workers have been plunged into distress with wage payments delayed; states are getting ready for a drop in food production; farmers are unable to access crop loans and commodity supplies in rural markets has declined.

Opposition parties in Parliament have opposed the unplanned government approach on demonetization. Serious questions are raised about lack of preparation to tackle the aftermath of demonetizing 86% of all currency in circulation. Adequate numbers of new currency notes to replace the old ones had not been printed before the policy was announced. Automatic Teller Machines had not been re-calibrated to dispense the new notes.

Urjit Patel, Governor of the Reserve bank of India since August 2016, is responsible for the implementation of the demonetization policy but he has remained completely silent since November 9. He has not found it necessary to make a single statement about the chaos that this process of demonetization has unleashed in the country. Shaktikanta Das, Secretary of the Department of Economic Affairs has been left to do the firefighting in front of the cameras.

From the raging debate over demonetization in the media, we may select a useful presentation. Welfare economist Jean Dreze has noted (Economic Times, November 22) that ‘demonetization in a booming economy, is like ‘shooting at the tires of a racing car’.

The sudden move to demonetize high-value currency notes has created a scary situation for people living on the margin of subsistence. Perhaps the opposition parties are the real targets of the present scale of demonetization and the resulting consequences.

Tall claims about the ability of demonetization to ‘flush out black money’ ‘crush the shadow economy,’ or achieve ‘an all-out assault on the parallel economy’ are based on the wrong theory of the ‘hoarding’ of black money which holds that black money is a gigantic hoard of illegal income that keeps growing in the economy and needs to be flushed out.

However, crooks know better than to keep their illegal income in suitcases of cash. Instead, they spend, invest, launder or convert it in one way or another. They use it to buy property, fund lavish weddings, shop in Dubai or oblige politicians. Of course, at any point of time some black money is likely to be lying in jars or pillow-cases. But going after that residual liquidity is like ‘mopping the floor under the shower.’

Thinking of demonetization as a decisive strike on the black economy is a severe delusion. This point has already been made by many eminent economists, but the government seems to prefer its own echo chamber.

It is to be noted that the main cash hoarders are likely to be political parties. For them, it makes sense to accumulate cash over time, in anticipation of election campaigns. Being in power, the ruling party is less vulnerable in this regard.

Looking at rural India, people waste a lot of time standing in long and serpentine queues in front of banks and ATMs. The liquidity crisis in the informal economy leads to worker layoffs, and many tragic deaths. Wider economic costs are likely to be felt soon.

Reports suggest that economic activity in rural markets has slowed down. When farmers are short of cash, agricultural laborers and local artisans are bound to suffer too. National Rural Employment Guarantee workers are also likely to be badly hit. As it is, they are affected by chronic delays in wage payments. With bank staff out of action for weeks, it is bound to become even harder for them to collect their meager wages. The same applies to social security pensions, a lifeline for millions of poor widows and elderly persons.

For people who live on the margin of subsistence, this is a scary situation.

Real financial inclusion means providing effective banking services to everyone. Today, many people have bank accounts but they are still deprived of banking services because the banks are distant, understaffed, overcrowded and often unfriendly towards poor people.

One reason why demonetization is causing so much havoc is that banks are out of their depths in the first place, especially in rural areas. For instance, they are finding it difficult to keep up with wage payments, pensions and scholarships.

Now, bank staffs are diverted full-time for weeks to renew bank notes. This will cause chaos beyond the demonetization deadline.

Simple measures such as extra bank counters, functional ATMs and better queuing systems could go a long way in improving banking services in rural areas. This is not rocket science.

Further, black money in the sense of illegal income may or may not be earned in cash, and even if it is earned in cash, it can easily be converted into other stores of value.

Demonetization on this scale is thus a huge gamble with the economy. The full consequences are difficult to predict. The best-case scenario is that the economy will stay the course, after the initial disruption, and that significant sums of black money will be neutralized.

The worst-case scenario is a prolonged economic slowdown, with very little result in terms of preventing illegal activity. The initial economic shock, already visible, can easily have ripple effects over the next few months. Delayed sowing of ‘rabi’ crops could affect the harvest months from now.

With employers short of cash, laborers are likely to lose jobs. Macroeconomic trends depend a lot on expectations. If the initial shock creates adverse expectations, the economy’s growth trajectory could be derailed.

The demonetization decision struck the country as lightening and left people cashless.

On November 15, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal made a stirring speech on demonetization at the specially convened session of the state assembly before the winter session of Parliament.

He accused Prime Minister Modi of having accepted huge bribes from the two major industrial groups of Aditya Birla and Sahara when he was chief minister of Gujarat in 2012-13. He displayed income tax departmental documents to prove his case. The case is now with the Supreme Court of India.

He said the Prime Minister was cherry-picking black money hoarders while other notoriously corrupt businessmen who had been awarded loans to the tune of millions of dollars were allowed to leave the country with no possibility of recovery of the money.

Modi, he said, was running a government of the rich and attacking the millions of poor in the name of curbing black money and tackling terrorism.

Impressively, the video containing Kejriwal’s November 15 speech in the state assembly containing serious charges against the ruling BJP and the Prime Minister received about 5 million views in just a week after the speech.

The AAP’s social media team said The AAP Facebook Page saw an organic growth of about 640 percent in the week after demonetization. The video has also garnered 172,128 shares on the party’s Facebook page making it the most popular post on the timeline of the party.

The Modi announcement on November 8 on demonetization amounted to USD 211 billion, made illegal tender with the stroke of a pen. Only one per cent of the Indian population pays income tax. The black economy makes up as much as 20 per cent of India’s total GDP, that is, USD 1.74 trillion in PPP terms.

Prime Minister Morarji Desai’s demonetization in 1978 made up just 0.6 percent of India’s then circulating currency though the demonetization effected by Narendra Modi has made illegal 86 per cent of India’s circulating currency. Modi says this is his war on corruption. Kejriwal described it is a war on the poor people of India!

Modi did not realise the implications of his demonetization decision: the impossibly long queues; the futile vigils; the empty ATMs; the exhausted bank employees; the abject misery of millions who live on less than a dollar a day and having to make a choice on whether to stand in line for currency from banks and ATMs or to devote the valuable time to earning money instead.

Modi was unhinged and he cried: ‘My life is in danger. They will kill me.’

The November 8, 2016 demonetization has been viewed as the single biggest disruptive move made by any Indian Prime minister after Independence. Its implementation was pathetic.What should have been charted out on Day One with military precision, emerges piecemeal bits every other day: indelible ink to be used; withdrawals to be increased; banks to remain open on Sundays; senior citizens to stand in a separate line; photocopies of ID cards not required and so on.

Half of Modi’s term as Prime Minister of India has ended. It is not clear what new rabbit the ‘event manager’ PM will pull out of his cap during the remaining term.

The Modi government has so far been working mainly for the welfare of the business community in India: in running hotels, airlines, insurance companies, coal fields, drug companies, power plants, steel smelters, banks and so on.

Every day these businesses make losses, and every day Modi throws more money at them. It would be funny if it were not so cruel. But no one appears to do or say anything; nor take Modi to task for failing to deliver on his promises to the people.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

In college, Sundar Pichai thought ‘Abey Saale’ was a friendly greeting


In college, Sundar Pichai thought ‘Abey Saale’ was a friendly greeting
Google CEO Sundar Pichai interacts with the students during an interactive session at IIT Kharagpur on Thursday. On a rewind mode, Mr. Pichai recalled his days at the institute which was his alma mater and on a humorous note, revealed that he thought ‘Abey Saale’ was a friendly greeting. The Google chief, who met his wife Anjali on campus, said the romance was tough because access to the girls’ hostel wasn’t easy.
Chennai-born Mr. Pichai, who returned to his alma mater after 23 years, said his comment led to “temporarily” shutting down of the mess.
“I came from Chennai. I learnt Hindi in school but I never spoke it much. So, just listening to how people are speaking, I just thought you address people this way. So one day, there was someone in the mess and I had to call him. I called him ‘Abey Saale’,” he reminisced to an audience of over 3,000 people.
“In the first couple of weeks, I thought you call people that way. Next thing I know is the folks in the mess were quite upset and I think they temporarily closed down the mess,” he added.
His love affair
The Google chief, who met his wife Anjali on campus, said the romance was tough because access to the girls’ hostel wasn’t easy.
“Someone would stand outside and very loudly say, ‘Anjali, Sundar is here for you’ It wasn’t exactly a pleasant experience,” he said.
He added that while technology, especially mobile phones, has changed the world, it has left certain things unchanged.
“My dorm at IIT looks exactly the same as 25 years ago,” he joked.
He too ... missed classes
Talking about his college days, Mr. Pichai said that like any other college goer, he stayed up late at night and missed classes in the morning.
He spoke of being interviewed by Google in 2004 and he thought Gmail was an April Fool’s joke.
It wasn’t until halfway through the process that he realised it was a real thing, he said at the discussion moderated by InfoEdge MD and CEO Hitesh Oberoi.
Cricket, soccer buff
A cricket and soccer fan, Mr. Pichai revealed that Infosys founder Narayana Murthy was his idol during college days and that he loved watching Sachin Tendulkar play.
A student asked Mr. Pichai what they would have to do to replace him. “I’d say, be careful what you wish for, but happy to discuss over a cup of chaai,” he said.


Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Agriculture

Agriculture can be highly profitable, but the gains are not easy to sustain

Travelling across the country for the past five months to bring farmers’ voices to urban audiences through a programme called ‘Smart Agriculture’ - to be broadcast every Saturday and Sunday from 25 July on CNN-IBN - we have learnt that agriculture is not a low-profit activity. In fact, it returns more than double the amount of cash invested.
Sandipan Suman, a 47 year-old agricultural sciences graduate and maize grower in Bihar’s Samastipur district, finds “it is more profitable than any other activity.” A holder of five acres, he says “except for acts of God you will get assured return.”
His view is endorsed by Ismailbhai Rahimbhai Sheru, 61, of Banaskantha’s Amirgarh taluk. A commerce graduate, he turned a legacy of debt into a thriving agricultural business. “I take at least one lakh profit out of one acre minimum,” he said. Sheru advises youth to shun government jobs and adopt agriculture. A holder of five acres can earn Rs 40,000 a month, he says. “Why should he take directions from somebody else?”
Reuters

According to the National Sample Survey, the all-India average monthly surplus over cost per household from agriculture was Rs 3,350. That was a return of 152 percent. The corresponding amount for Punjab was 16,340 a month, or 139 percent of the amount invested. On the basis of actual cost of cultivation of the kharif crop for the three years 2008-2011, a central government agency said cotton gave a surplus of 103 percent over paid out cost and imputed family labour, while that of paddy was 69 percent.
We came across a couple of banana growers in Jalgaon in Maharashtra making tens of millions of rupees in profit every year. They started out quite humble; one was a tea vendor, the other a thwarted school teacher. But the package of tissue culture, drip irrigation and fertigation (judicious application of dissolved fertiliser using drips) had changed their fortunes.
Scale matters. The size of income depends on the extent of land cultivated, the quality of soil, access to irrigation and distance from markets.
Agriculture may be profitable, but it is not paying when too many people in a household depend on it; there is not enough to go around.
The law of averages catches up because of erratic weather and price slumps.
Contract farming can take care of the market risk and enable farmers to earn more by devoting themselves to productivity and quality. The background note to the 2002 bill to amend the Agricultural Produce Marketing Act, which requires farmers to sell only in regulated mandis, recommends the same thing.
An abundance of potatoes this March had sent prices crashing. We saw kilometre-long queues outside cold storages in the Hooghly and Bardhaman districts of West Bengal as small holders strove to prevent nature’s grace from turning into grief. In Deesa, a potato hub in Gujarat’s Banaskanta district, there are 145 cold storages – a density higher than in West Bengal, yet we saw tension outside as farmers fretted about getting their produce to safety. Those who had contracted to supply to food processors were spared the ordeal. They were getting Rs 8 a kg when open market prices had dived to less than Rs 2.
We found that government actions are not thought through and have unintended consequences. West Bengal’s ban on the movement of potatoes outside the state to check prices a couple of years ago had deterred a multinational from engaging in contract farming in the state. It feared a repeat, which would have hit supplies to a processing plant it was setting up in Gujarat.
At a mandi in Nurpur Bet village of Ludhiana district we found farmers camping in the summer sun, and even at night, some of them for over a week, waiting for government agencies to procure wheat damaged by off-season rains. The quality norms had been relaxed but farmers suspected they were being worn out so that they would sell cheaply to traders, who in turn would dump the wheat they had purchased on government agencies at higher support prices and split the difference. This ploy was also suspected by farmers we met in Mathura and Aligarh. They are unlikely to cheer a news report in the third week of June that the Uttar Pradesh government had procured 168 percent more wheat than the previous year. Certainly, it was not procured directly from them.
Crop insurance can mitigate weather risks, but we found farmers treating the premium as the necessary cost of obtaining a crop loan. Being mandatory for borrowers, it was seen more as a protection for banks. India’s weather-based crop insurance scheme is the biggest in the world, with 13 lakh policyholders. But like the bikini, it leaves out more than it covers. The number of farmers covered, including those by two other programmes, does not exceed a third and the claims paid, though a multiple of the premium, hardly provides relief. Sugad Singh of Mathura got Rs 1,700 as claim for a rice crop lost last year. Farmers in Jabalpur said bank executives tired them out by requiring the village patwari to certify that at least half of their crop had been destroyed; he would not oblige.
Universal and adequate state-funded insurance cover would make farm lives less uncertain and persuade agriculturists to take risks, but experts advise caution. Corruption and frauds that plagued the earlier yield insurance scheme would be difficult to control. Farmers might neglect their crops when assured of a fallback income. They think weather-based insurance can be improved with technology and mathematics. It should be used to pay initial relief, while yield insurance based on crop cutting samples can deliver the final compensation.
Despite a large number of people being engaged in agriculture, wherever we went farmers spoke about high wages and unavailability of labour when needed. Like employers in general, farmers are unwilling to pay more, but they also cannot compete with the wages paid at construction projects and in factories. Labour shortage gets aggravated by the bunching of agricultural operations; there is usually a spike in demand during sowing and harvesting seasons. Farmers sought affordable machines; some wanted herbicide-tolerant crops to be approved so they would not have to spend a packet on manual weed removal.
We found the government to be tall on talk, but missing in action. Farmers clamour for certified seeds but these are in short supply as state agencies do not produce enough. About two million tonnes of paddy seed are required annually but production is about seven lakh tonnes. Farmers do not mind paying for seed so long as productivity and good prices are assured. There is a high degree of maize hybridisation in Bihar, though seeds have to be purchased year after year. The seed replacement ratio is high in Punjab too. The Indian Agricultural Research Institute says in 2014 it had to initially limit to 108 the number of private seed producers of a new wheat variety it had introduced the previous year in 2013 because it ran out of breeder seeds to give them (for seed multiplication).
Farmers are good at production; it is the marketing aspect they cannot get a grip on. We visited four farmer producer companies (FPCs) in Coimbatore. These had been made possible by an amendment in 2002 to the Companies Act. They were engaged in producing guavas, pomegranate, vegetables and coconuts. We saw the gains of banding together. A member-farmer with 2.5 acres said he felt as if he owned 10 times as much because the FPC had amplified his clout with workers and traders. But would the next Amul emerge from them? Though our entrepreneurial class is drawn from peasant castes like Patidars, Gounders, Kammas and Kapus, we wondered whether farmer companies could master the nuances of finance and marketing.
There are pockets of vibrancy in the countryside and a desire to do better. But we also found the next generation not too keen. The thinning of numbers will improve the profitability of agriculture but is worrisome because we are losing useful skills. Government policies must be purposive and farmer-centric. For consumer care we need another set of instruments.

Advancement Teaser

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

JALLIKATTU SUPPORTERS

BAN HORSE RACING, DOG SHOWS TOO, DEMAND JALLIKATTU SUPPORTERS


Photo: Amshudhagar/Wikipedia

Organisers have said the Supreme Court’s refusal to revoke the ban on Jallikattu, Tamil Nadu’s bull taming sport, will affect thousands of farmers dependent on this breed of cattle for their livelihood. A winning bull can fetch a farmer as much as Rs 2 lakh.
The apex court has dismissed petitions supporting the sport, among the oldest in the world, for this week’s Pongal season. Tamil Nadu celebrated last week on news that the bull taming sport had been permitted. As preparations were on for Pongal, animal rights activists approached the Supreme Court seeking the ban be upheld. The court subsequently refused to stay its decision on a plea by the Tamil Nadu government.
Jallikattu is organised in 24 places between January 14 and January 17 in Tamil Nadu. An event can raise up to Rs 15 lakh in a village, says Balakumar Somu, a member of a Jallikattu organising committee. A technology professional, Somu quit a job in Singapore, relocated to Coimbatore and started a website supporting Jallikattu.
According to him, a farmer invests Rs 5,000-10,000 to buy a calf and his family nurtures it for 18 months into a healthy bull. Jallikattu is a platform to find buyers. Bulls that win can fetch their owners Rs 1.5-2 lakh. The buyers are rich people who employ 5-6 hands to maintain the bulls. These hands, mostly women, are paid Rs 800-900 a week.

The other set of people affected are artisans. In many villages a major source of income comes from creating decorative items, including special ropes, for the bulls and for the race. Jallikattu may be a three-day festival, but it is a source of income for farmers throughout the year, Somu points out.
Organisers spend anywhere between Rs 50,000 and Rs 20 lakh to organise a Jallikattu. The money is spent on preparing the ground, deposit money and gifts that include motorcycles, gold coins, bicycles, steel almirahs, sheep and goats. Local brands advertise at these events and the merchandise includes coffee mugs, posters, coasters and bedsheets.

A state government official says it is a myth that Jallikattu brings in tourism revenue. All shops and hotels are shut during the festival and most people at a Jallikattu event are from surrounding villages.

The ban will also affect special cattle breeds used in Jallikattu, including the Kangeyam bulls. “The banning of Jallikattu will ultimately result in the vanishing of native species and the country becoming import dependent for bovine animals,” says Karthikeya Sivasenapathy, managing trustee, Senaapathy Kangayam Cattle Research Foundation.
The foundation works on preservation of native cattle breeds. Sivasenapathy says the population of Kangayam cattle has come down from 1.1 million in 1990 to around 100,000 now.


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