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Monthly Archives: April 2016

ప్రజాస్వామ్యం కోసం చికాగో టీచర్ల సమ్మె !

03 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, USA

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Chicago Teachers, Chicago Teachers Union, Chicago Teachers Union strike, The CTU’s Strike

ఎం కోటేశ్వరరావు

    అమెరికాలోని చికాగో నగర టీచర్లు మరోసారి ఈనెల ఒకటిన సమ్మె చేశారు.ఈ ఆందోళన ప్రత్యేకత ఏమంటే కెనడా, అమెరికాలోని అనేక దూర ప్రాంతాల నుంచి కూడా వచ్చిన కొంత మందితో సహా పాతికవేల మంది టీచర్లు తరగతులు బహిష్కరించి ఇల్లినాయిస్‌ విశ్వవిద్యాలయం వద్ద జరిగిన ధర్నాలో పాల్గొన్నారు. విద్యార్ధులు, టీచర్ల ప్రయోజనాలను దెబ్బతీస్తూ విద్యారంగానికి బడ్జెట్‌ కేటాయింపులను తగ్గించిన చర్యకు నిరసన ఇది. వుదయం ఆరున్నరకే ప్రతి స్కూలు వద్ద గుమికూడిన టీచర్లు చికాగో మేయర్‌ ఇమ్మాన్యుయేల్‌కు వ్యతిరేకంగా నినాదాలు చేశారు. స్కూలు టీచర్లకు సంఘీభావంగా చికాగోలోని అనేక విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల సిబ్బంది రోజంతా ప్రదర్శనలు నిర్వహించారు. రాష్ట్ర గవర్నర్‌(మన ముఖ్యమంత్రి మాదిరి) విశ్వవిద్యాలయాలకు 30శాతం కోత విధించారని వారు విమర్శించారు. సమాజంలోని ఒక శాతం మందిపై పన్నులు ఎక్కువగా విధించి ప్రభుత్వ పాఠశాల విద్యను కాపాడాలన్నది టీచర్ల ప్రధాన నినాదం.చికాగో టీచర్ల సమ్మె స్కూళ్లకు, తమ పెన్షన్లకు నిధులు పెంచాలని మాత్రమే కాదు లేదా కార్పొరేట్‌ సంస్ధలపై పన్ను పెంచాలని జరపలేదు, వాటన్నింటికోసం జరిగింది. సామాజిక వనరులను ఎవరు స్వంతం చేసుకోవాలి, వాటికి సంబంధించిన నిర్ణయాలు ఎవరు చేయాలనే ప్రజాస్వామిక అంశంపై కూడా జరిగింది అని జాకోబిన్‌ పత్రిక వ్యాఖ్యానించింది.

     సమ్మె ప్రజాస్వామ్యం కోసమే కాదు, ప్రజాస్వామ్య బద్దంగా కూడా జరిగింది. నిజమైన ప్రజాస్వామ్యం ఎలా వుంటుందో టీచర్స్‌ యూనియన్‌ చూపింది. ఇల్లినాయిస్‌ రాష్ట్ర చట్ట ప్రకారం సమ్మె చేయాలంటే యూనియన్‌ సభ్యులలో 75శాతం మంది ఆమోదం తెలపాలి.ఆ మేరకు డిసెంబరులో జరిగిన ఓటింగ్‌లో 96శాతం మంది టీచర్లు పాల్గొన్నారు, వారిలో 92శాతం అనుకూలంగా ఓటు చేశారు. మార్చి 23న జరిగిన యూనియన్‌ కార్యవర్గంలో 486-124 తేడాతో సమ్మె నిర్ణయానికి ఆమోదం తెలిపారు.

    నిధులను తగ్గించి వచ్చే ఏడాది అనేక స్కూళ్లను మూసివేయాలన్న ప్రభుత్వ ఆలోచనను తలిదండ్రులు కూడా వ్యతిరేకిస్తున్నారు.ఈ సమ్మెను విచ్చిన్నం చేసేందుకు అధికార యంత్రాంగం తీవ్రంగా ప్రయత్నించింది. సమ్మె చట్ట విరుద్ధమని ప్రకటించి చర్యలు తీసుకుంటామని టీచర్లను బెదిరించటమే గాక కోర్టు ద్వారా నిలిపివేతకు సైతం ప్రయత్నించింది.మరోవైపున ఈ సమ్మె కేవలం టీచర్ల వుద్యోగాలకు సంబంధించిన అంశం గాక ఒక ప్రజా సమస్యగా మారింది. ఈ కారణంగానే ఎనిమిది ఇతర యూనియన్లు, అనేక సామాజిక బృందాలు టీచర్లకు బాసటగా నిలిచాయి.

    చికాగో కార్మికోద్యమ చరిత్రలో టీచర్స్‌ యూనియన్‌కు ఒక ప్రాధాన్యత వుంది. ప్రభుత్వ విధానాలపై పోరాడటం ద్వారా ప్రత్యేకతను సంతరించుకుంది. తాజా సమ్మె ఒక శాతం ధనికులు, 99శాతం కార్మికులకు సంబంధించిన సమస్యపై జరిగింది. అమెరికన్‌ పాలకవర్గం అందరికీ సామాజిక భద్రత కల్పించాల్సింది పోయి అలాంటి భద్రత కొంత మందికే ఎందుకు, అంటూ లేనివారిని రెచ్చగొడుతున్నది. చికాగో టీచర్లు, బస్‌ డ్రైవర్ల ఆరోగ్య పధకాలకు, పెన్షన్ల కోసం అందరూ పన్నులు చెల్లించాలా అంటూ ప్రచారం చేస్తున్నారు.యూనియన్లకు వ్యతిరేకంగా జనాన్ని రెచ్చగొట్టే యత్నమిది.టీచర్లు సమ్మె చేస్తే ఆ రోజుల్లో మీ పిల్లల్ని ఎవరు చూస్తారంటూ గతంలో సమ్మె సందర్భంగా తలిదండ్రులను రెచ్చగొట్టారు. ఈ సారి ఒక్క రోజు సమ్మెకే పిలుపు ఇచ్చినప్పటికీ నాలుగు లక్షల మంది విద్యార్ధులకు తరగతులు పోయాయని కొంత మంది మొసలి కన్నీరు కార్చారు. నిజానికి దీని కంటే ప్రభుత్వ నిధులు తగ్గింపు వలన తమ బిడ్డలు ఎక్కువ ఇబ్బందులు పడతారని తలిదండ్రులు గ్రహించారు కాబట్టే ఈ సారి వారిని రెచ్చగొట్టే ప్రచారం పెద్దగా ఫలితాన్ని ఇవ్వలేదు, ప్రభావం చూపలేదు.

     ఇప్పుడు ఎన్నికల ప్రచారంలో కూడా ఇలాంటి రెచ్చగొట్టుడు అంశాలు చోటు చేసుకుంటున్నాయి.వలసవచ్చిన వారు అమెరికన్లకు వుపాధి లేకుండా చేస్తున్నారని, మెక్సికో, చైనాలనుంచి దిగుమతులు కారణంగా వుద్యోగాలు అక్కడి వారికి కల్పిస్తున్నారన్న ప్రచారం ముఖ్యంగా రిపబ్లికన్లు చేస్తున్నారు.ప్రభుత్వ రంగ సంస్ధల వుద్యోగుల యూనియన్లకు వ్యతిరేకంగా కోర్టులలో కేసులు ఇటీవలి కాలంలో బాగా పెరుగుతున్నాయి. బేరసారాలాడే హక్కును దెబ్బతీసేందుకు ప్రయత్నం జరుగుతోంది. తద్వారా కార్మికులను యూనియన్లకు దూరం చేసే ఎత్తుగడలో భాగమది. చికాగోలోని టీచర్లు, ఇతర కార్మిక సంఘాలు పోరాటాల నుంచి అనేక అనుభవాలు నేర్చుకున్నాయి. కార్పొరేట్‌ సంస్ధలు ప్రజా సేవల నుంచి పెద్ద మొత్తంలో ఎలా స్వాహా చేస్తున్నాయో ఎప్పటి కపుడు పౌరులకు తెలియ చేస్తున్నాయి. ధనికులపై పన్నులు ఎక్కువగా వసూలు చేయాల్సిన అవసరాన్ని పేర్కొంటున్నాయి.ఈ క్రమంలో పౌర సామాజిక బృందాలను కలుపుకోవటం ప్రత్యేకించి గమనించాల్సిన అంశం. దీనిలో భాగంగానే సేవారంగం, ఆరోగ్యరంగం, టీచర్ల యూనియన్లు తమకు మద్దతు కూడ గట్టేందుకు యునైటెడ్‌ వర్కింగ్‌ ఫ్యామిలీస్‌ పేరుతో ఒక రాజకీయ వేదికను ఏర్పాటు చేశాయి. రిపబ్లికన్లు, డెమోక్రాట్లు ఎన్నికల సమయంలో కార్మికవరగ్గాన్ని వుపయోగించుకోవటం తప్ప అధికారానికి వచ్చిన దాడులు జరపటంలో ఎవరికెరూ తీసిపోవటం లేదని, అందువలన తమకు అనుకూలమైన రాజకీయ వేదికలను ఏర్పాటు చేసుకోవాలని చికాగో కార్మికవర్గం నిర్ణయించుకుంది. 2012 నాటి టీచర్ల సమ్మె విజయం తరువాత చికాగో నగర పాలక సంస్ధ అనేక స్కూళ్లను మూసివేసి పెద్ద సంఖ్యలో టీచర్లను ఇంటికి పంపింది. దాంతో ఎన్నికలలో యునైటెడ్‌ వర్కింగ్‌ ఫ్యామిలీస్‌ సంస్ధ తన అభ్యర్ధులను నిలిపింది. తొమ్మిది కౌన్సిల్‌ స్ధానాలకు గాను మూడింటిలో విజయం సాధించింది. అయినప్పటికీ చికాగో కార్మికవర్గం నిరుత్సాహపడలేదు.

     ఈనెల ఒకటిన జరిగిన సమ్మెకు ముందు టీచర్స్‌ యూనియన్‌ సమ్మె బ్యాలట్‌ నిర్వహించగా 88శాతం మంది సమ్మెకు అనుకూలంగా ఓటు వేశారు. యూనియన్‌ను పటిష్ట పరచటం, ప్రతి చోటా స్ధానిక నాయకత్వాన్ని గుర్తించటం, సమస్యలపై వెంటనే స్పందించటం, ఇతర రంగ కార్మికులకు మద్దతు ప్రకటించటం వంటి చర్యలతో టీచర్స్‌యూనియన్‌ టీచర్ల విశ్వాసాన్ని చూరగొన్నది. ప్రతి ఒక్కరికీ నిర్ణయం, అమలులో పమేయం కల్పించటం ద్వారా గతంలో అనేక ఎదురు దెబ్బలు తగిలినప్పటికీ ఏప్రిల్‌ ఒకటవ తేదీ సమ్మె జయప్రదంగా ముగియటం వారిలో పోరాట పటిమ తగ్గలేదనటానికి నిదర్శనంగా చెప్పవచ్చు. చికాగో టీచర్స్‌ యూనియన్‌ చూపుతున్న మార్గం అన్ని దేశాలలోని కార్మిక, వుద్యోగ సంఘాలకు మార్గదర్శనం చేస్తున్నదని చెప్పవచ్చు. ఆ యూనియన్‌ ఇతర యూనియన్లతో పాటు సామాజిక న్యాయ తరగతులు అంటే తక్కువ వేతనాలకు పనిచేసే ఫాస్ట్‌ ఫుడ్‌ సెంటర్ల కార్మికుల నుంచి నల్లజాతీయుల జీవిత సమస్యల వరకు(మన దేశంలో షెడ్యూలు కులాలు, తరగతులు, ఇతర బలహీన వర్గాలు) వరకు వారు సంబంధాలు కలిగి వున్నారు.అమెరికా సమాజంలో పురోగామి మార్పునకు ఒక శక్తిగా వున్నారని జాకోబిన్‌ అనే పత్రిక వ్యాఖ్యానించింది.

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Kerosene Free Chandigarh from April 1, 2016

02 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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BPL Households, Chandigarh, Kerosene, lpg

 From 1st April, 2016, Chandigarh will be declared kerosene free, with the efforts of the city Administration and Oil Marketing Companies. Thus, no further distribution of subsidized kerosene will be done in Chandigarh from the month of April, 2016 onwards.

The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, Government of India with the help of Chandigarh Administration has been working for the last few months to make Chandigarh ‘a Kerosene Free City’. MoPNG decided to facilitate the households presently using Kerosene Oil by facilitating switchover to LPG. In the whole process and to facilitate the kerosene beneficiaries to have LPG connections, the following steps were taken by OMCs and Chandigarh administration:

a) Camps were organized at various localities in consultation with Chandigarh administration to provide hassle free LPG connections.

b) Deposit free LPG connections were provided to BPL households and interest free loan scheme was launched for APL households.

c) IEC campaign in the form of distribution of Pamphlets and Radio Jingles was done to create awareness among the mass.

During this campaign, a total of 15,249 LPG connections were provided in Chandigarh city, including 1574 for BPL households.

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socialism­ on­ campus

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, History, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, RUSSIA, USA

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Bernie Sanders, Cold War, democratic socialist, Harvard Students, John Reed, presidential campaign, Russian Revolution, Socialist

 

http://www.futureofcapitalism.com/2016/03/

The Harvard Crimson has published, as a “special report,” an admiring profile of Soviet dupe John Reed. The article concludes with a discussion of how the presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders has made socialism fashionable on campus: One of the long­lasting impacts of Bernie Sanders’ campaign is the way that… he’s been able to change the conversation around “the s­word,” Tyrik LaCruise ’17, an avid Sanders supporter, said. “Running as a democratic socialist, people are like ‘Whoa, wait a second. It’s not as dirty as I thought. The post office is socialism. Public schools? Socialism. We have roads. That’s socialism.'” Paul Adler, a lecturer in Harvard’s History and Literature concentration, is intrigued by that reclamation. “The Sanders phenomenon is blowing my mind…. He calls himself a socialist. According to the polls of Democratic party voters, a lot of people are OK calling themselves socialists,” he said. “Maybe it’s been enough time since the Cold War that there can be a renewed attempt at all this.” If these Harvard folks think socialism is so nifty, why they don’t all decamp to U. Mass., Amherst, or some other government­run institution? The whole situation seems pretty grim, at least to judge by this particular special report.
You Say You Want a Revolution
Before Reed was a fearless revolutionary, he was a lonely Harvard student.
BY LAURA E. HATT, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER MARCH 31, 2016
John S. Reed, class of 1910, was in it for the money.

“I recall his telling me that he had two ambitions when he came to college,” a classmate of Reed’s said in the Academy Award-winning 1981 biopic “Reds.” “One was to be elected president of his class. He didn’t know anyone in his class. No one knew him. The other was to make a million dollars by the time he was 25.”

That would change. By Reed’s senior year of college, he would reject the narrow-minded Harvard aristocracy. He would take over club meetings and ruin dinner parties, overflowing with passionate rants about equality and the worker. Consumed with radicalism, he would dedicate his college career to sparking “an influx of discontent, of revolutionary ideas, of criticism and revolt.”

Less than 10 years after that, Reed would become one of the most prominent American communist leaders and writers of the early 20th century. In fact, he spent the decade after college in a propaganda-writing, labor-organizing, revolution-inciting frenzy. In 1913, he rode with Pancho Villa’s army, reporting on the Mexican Revolution. In 1917 he travelled to the USSR as an independent journalist, joining Lenin in the October Revolution. In 1919 he helped form the Communist Labor Party of America, serving as its international delegate.

By that time, John Reed had become a household name. His account of the Russian Revolution, “Ten Days that Shook the World”, was being taught in schools across the USSR. Those who had known him praised him as “the pulse of the young lion,” mourned him as “a Soviet Russian hero,” and pitied him as a victim of “the damned Bolsheviki.” When he died of typhus on Oct. 17, 1920, his body was buried in the Kremlin.

Reed wasn’t born a socialist, though. In fact, he was born into a typical upper middle-class family in Portland, Oregon on Oct. 22, 1887. Though he would eventually grow into a tall, broad-shouldered athlete—hazel eyes intense even in laughter—as a child he was sickly and bullied by his peers.

Childhood images of John Reed

Childhood images of John Reed
John Reed posing as a child. John Reed Additional Papers, 1887-1976 (MS Am 1091.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. COURTESY OF JOHN REED ADDITIONAL PAPERS, 1887-1976 (MS AM 1091.3). HOUGHTON LIBRARY, HARVARD UNIVERSITY.

“I wasn’t much good at the things other boys were, and their codes of honor and conduct didn’t hold me. They felt it too, and had a sort of good-natured contempt,” Reed recalled in his memoir, “Almost Thirty.” “One time, when I was on the editorial board of the school paper, a boy I was afraid of warned me not to publish a joking paragraph I had written about him—and I didn’t…” From a young age, Reed wanted nothing more than acceptance.

Before Reed was a fearless revolutionary, he was a lonely Harvard student. Before he wrote satire for “The Masses,” he wrote plays for the Hasty Pudding. Before he aspired to the Executive Committee of the Comintern, he tried to get punched by the Porcellian.

Before Reed denounced the aristocracy, he desperately wanted to join it.

Rich Men’s Sons
John Reed was not born into the proletariat. He spent his earliest years mixing with Portland high society in his wealthy grandmother’s home, which he later described as “… a lordly grey mansion modelled on a French chateau, with its immense park, its formal gardens, lawns, stables, green-houses and glass grape-arbor, the tame deer among the trees…” His grandfather, Henry D. Green, had founded the Portland Gas-light Company, and purchased the estate in 1873 for $28,000 (equivalent to about half a million dollars today).

That prosperity was short-lived: Reed’s grandmother had expensive taste and a love of travel, and after her husband’s death she quickly spent the majority of the family fortune. Reed’s financial situation became even more precarious after a severe economic depression shook the United States in 1893. When Reed was only nine years old, his parents moved from the Green mansion to an apartment downtown. A few years later, Reed’s father became embroiled in a political scandal that provoked the ire of the Portland aristocracy—the final nail in the Reed family’s social coffin.
Still, Reed attended some of the most expensive schools on the East Coast. At 16, he left Portland for a New Jersey boarding school, and in the fall of 1906 he enrolled at Harvard College. A few years later, his brother, Harry, followed. This prestigious education came at both a financial and an emotional cost: as Reed reminisced a decade later, “We never knew until later how much our mother and father denied themselves that we might go, and how [my father] poured out his life that we might live like rich men’s sons.”

Reed might have been able to afford the cost of tuition, but he could not hide his Western, middle-class roots: Harvard had an excellent nose for those masquerading as “rich men’s sons.”

William James described students like Reed in his 1903 essay “The True Harvard.” Those who arrived “from the remotest outskirts of our country, without introductions, without school affiliations,” had no place in Harvard’s social spaces, he said. “They seldom or never darken the doors of the Pudding or the Porcellian.”

As John M. Brown ’23 wrote in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin, the Harvard of 1906 was a place of “poor boys and rich boys; those favored because they were Brahmin-born and others penalized because they were not.” Most of Reed’s new peers had attended elite East Coast prep schools, and considered “new money”—or, worse, no money—beneath them. A boisterous nobody from Portland hardly stood a chance.

This never deterred Reed. A childhood on the (relative) social margins had conditioned him to value popularity, and a natural competitive instinct drove him to compete for it. He developed a fascination with Harvard’s aristocracy, and when he arrived on campus in the fall of 1906 he sought to join it.

“A furious energy drove me to all kinds of bodily and mental exercise, without any particular direction,” he wrote in his memoir. “I was increasingly active and restless, more ambitious of place and power, less exalted, scattering myself in a hundred different directions…” He wanted to be a poet. He wanted to be a novelist. He wanted to be a lover, and a fighter, and a rebel. More than anything else, he wanted to be accepted.

“During my freshman year I used to pray to be liked, to have friends, to be popular with the crowd,” Reed wrote.

The Waiting Game
To a lonely Harvard freshman at the turn of the twentieth century, popularity meant joining a Final Club.

The punch process began with admission to the Institute of 1770, an exclusive social organization which selected 100 men from the sophomore class each year and named them “the socially elect.” Becoming a member of the Institute meant prestige; it meant status; most of all, it meant eligibility for the next tier of exclusive social organizations, the Waiting Clubs. After election to a Waiting Club, juniors and seniors were eligible for an invitation to a Final Club—the apex of the whole system, and the playground of Harvard’s elite.

“To the ordinary freshman before whose eyes the plum of the Institute is dangled,” Reed wrote, “a Final Club seems the end of earthly ambitions.”

Childhood images of John Reed
John Reed poses as a teenager. COURTESY OF JOHN REED ADDITIONAL PAPERS, 1887-1976 (MS AM 1091.3). HOUGHTON LIBRARY, HARVARD UNIVERSITY.
It all hinged on the Institute. For Reed, though, getting in was easier said than done. When the Class of 1910 entered Harvard, it had nearly 700 members. The Institute would select only 100. Reed’s odds were bad from the start.

In search of a niche, Reed tried to join the freshman crew team. He committed a significant portion of his freshman year to the task, even staying on campus during holidays to row by himself, but he was the last rower eliminated before the end-of-year Harvard-Yale crew regatta and never technically made the team.

Reed’s initial forays into the arts community ended similarly fruitlessly. Though he’d later write books and articles hailed by nations, by the end of his freshman year he hadn’t been granted entry to a single campus publication.

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“I got to know many fellows to nod to, and a very few intimately; but most of my friends were whirled off and up into prominence, and came to see me no more,” he reminisced in “Almost Thirty,” “Athletes and musicians and writers and statesmen were emerging from the ranks of the class. The Freshman clubs were forming. And I was out of it all.”

Reed was never invited to join the Institute of 1770. He never joined a Waiting Club, he never joined a Final Club, and he never really reached the upper echelons he’d aspired to as a freshman.

This exclusion was partially the product of class. Reed hadn’t been born into the eastern elite, and the eastern elite knew it.

Reed knew it, too. When he was rejected sophomore year for two posts for which he felt he “qualified easily”—an editorial position at The Harvard Crimson and the assistant managership of the Varsity Crew team—he chalked it up to snobbery and walked away bitter.

It wasn’t only Reed’s class, though: When Reed’s brother arrived to Harvard two years later, he was invited to join the same organizations that had overlooked his older sibling. The snub was also personal.

“There is a clue to his lack of acceptance, his lack of the quality the British call ‘clubable,’” wrote his classmate, Edward E. Hunt, class of 1910. “Through everything he did there ran a strand of the grotesque which turned the most serious event into laughter.”

Regardless of its cause, Reed took rejection hard. “The thought that he could be considered inferior, unworthy of their attention no matter what he did, came as a numbing shock to him,” wrote Richard O’Connor in his biography of Reed, “The Lost Revolutionary.”

The Athlete, the Scholar, and the Activities Man
By sophomore year, Reed recalibrated. Rejected by the elites and no longer willing to measure personal success by class or wealth, he found a new strategy for social acceptance: joining as many extracurricular activities as possible. As he saw it, the class was divided into three neat groups: the athlete, the scholar, and the “activities man.” Reed knew which he wanted to join.
In Reed’s model, athletes represented the pinnacle of the social hierarchy. “The average undergraduate would rather win his “H” than get Phi Beta Kappa,” he wrote in an essay. He wasn’t wrong: by 1907-08, Reed’s sophomore year, campus athletics had become such a dominant social force that President Eliot became concerned that sports were exhausting players, keeping fans from their studies, and encouraging “the betting evil.”

Despite his initial setbacks on the river, Reed enjoyed moderate athletic success on the field and in the pool. He was a member of the swimming team, captain of the water polo team, and song-leader of the cheerleading squad.

A former classmate, the Pulitzer prize-winning left-wing journalist Walter Lippmann, class of 1910, remembered Reed as the star of the cheerleading squad. “He would stand up alone before a few thousand undergraduates and demonstrate without a quiver of self-consciousness just how a cheer should be given,” Lippmann wrote in the New Republic in 1914. “If he didn’t like the way his instructions were followed he cursed at the crowd, bullied it, sneered at it. It was a sensational triumph for [John] Reed but wasn’t altogether good form at college.”

In the Russian Revolution, the ability to rouse a crowd would serve him well.

Still, Reed saw the athlete’s position in the campus hierarchy as that of an empty figurehead with no real power. He thought that the student that embodied Harvard’s most traditional values was really “the scholar:” “He is studying what the great Harvard men of the past have studied—he is really seeking what Harvard has stood for for three hundred years—Veritas.”

Reed himself barely scraped past Harvard’s entrance exams, and he left an undergraduate record dotted with C’s, D’s, and E’s (modern F’s). A self-confessed “indifferent student,” he found the classroom dry and lifeless. “Why should I have been interested in the stupid education of our time?” he asked. “We take young soaring imaginations, consumed with curiosity about the life they see all around, and feed them with dead technique.” He wrote a number of his essays on club or scrap stationary, perhaps as a deliberate snub.

Though Reed respected Harvard’s undergraduate scholars, he never wanted to befriend or become one. “Long lack of comradeship with any but those of his kind have made him intolerant of frivolity, have dried in him the natural desires and exaltations of youth, and therefore he is misunderstood and despised,” he wrote.

That left the “activities man.” Students active in extracurriculars had the social clout lacked by athletes and the social graces lacked by scholars. They embodied all the virtues a turn-of-the-20th-century ‘Harvard Man.’ “They are a community of enthusiasts, men of all trades,” he wrote. “They are dreamers and often poets. Their grades are often very poor mediocre and they subordinate college work to their “activities”…. They talk a great deal among themselves, exchanging ideas and thoughts, strengthening friendships and learning what real standards there are by which to judge a man.” The activities man was busy, plugged in, a member of all the clubs, an insider.

By the time of his graduation, Reed had joined so many extracurriculars that his class bio was longer than his (nonexistent) senior thesis. He managed the Glee Club; he joined the Debating Club; he was a member of such mysteriously named organizations as the Memorial Society, the Round Table, the Symposium, and the Oracle. At various points, Reed was a member of some 16 organizations and teams—an impressive number even by Harvard’s contemporary standard.
Reed was the activities man.

A Seat at the Table
Amongst these many organizations were a few campus publications. Despite his failed start at the Crimson, Reed became an editor at the Harvard Monthly, a literary magazine where his poems and stories, “juvenile and imitative though they were, won respect and praise and inspired enthusiastic prophecies,” according to Granville Hicks ’23. He was also a writer and “Ibis”—second-in-command—at the Lampoon.
Reed was a leader as well as a writer. He had a gift for organizing people and executing visions—and he had no shortage of ideas.

Still struggling to reconcile his Portland upbringing with his Cambridge education, he became president of the Western Club. A casual eating club created to defy Harvard’s puritanical social norms, the organization became known for mischief and outrageous practical jokes. As President, Reed sat at the head of every table and introduced diners in increasingly ludicrous ways.

“Gentlemen, the future President of the United States!” he cried when Lippmann joined him one evening.

“Where have you bean?” he shouted at another friend, throwing a handful of beans.

Reed didn’t confine his antics to the Western Club. As Hicks reported, over the spring break of his junior year, a debacle involving a series of bars, “a resort of dubious reputation,” and a spontaneous trip to Bermuda resulted in Reed’s “rustication”—an archaic punishment based on exile to Concord, Mass. Reed spent the rest of the semester in time-out.

When not in Concord, Reed served as President of the Cosmopolitan Club. Founded by Reed on Feb. 12, 1908, the club united Harvard’s international students, entertained foreign dignitaries, and discussed world affairs. It was wildly successful: 53 students joined at its inception, and by Reed’s graduation in the spring of 1910 that number had grown to roughly 200.

Reed called it “one of the most important organizations ever formed among the students at Harvard.”

Then again, Reed had a taste for hyperbole. It showed up in his rhetoric, marked his prose, and, in the fall of his junior year, inspired the creation of the Dramatic Club.

The club provided Harvard’s budding playwrights with a stage. The school offered few opportunities to produce original student theater, and students taking playwriting courses—including Reed and his two co-founders, Edward Sheldon and Hans V. Kaltenborn—chafed at the limitation. Rather than trying to convince an existing troupe to produce student work, they decided to make their own.

The Dramatic Club was novel for another reason: it became the first theater group on campus to admit women to its ranks. The decision provoked controversy. Members felt that “if we expected to achieve any social distinction at Harvard with our newly organized club, we simply could not permit the participation of Radcliffe girls,” Kaltenborn recalled in his memoir, “Fifty Fabulous Years.” Eventually, these protests were eventually overlooked “in the interest of better drama,” and the Dramatic Club (antecedent of the contemporary Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club) went co-ed.

It’s easy to see traces of Reed’s later persona in his early college activities. By junior year, Reed was already an iconoclast, defying social mores and laughing at Harvard authority. He was an idealist, uniting his peers and planning to bring labor justice to the world. He was a leader, screaming at crowds in stadiums and theaters and pitting himself against the status quo.

But while he’d turned his eyes from the elites and become the “activities man” he’d always wanted to be, he was still searching for his cause. “John Reed was not a fiery left-winger in those days,” wrote Kaltenborn. “He was a nonconformist.”

Senior year, that changed.

Infiltrating the Ranks
In his final year of college, Reed discovered the Harvard Socialist Club. Founded by two freshmen in 1908, the club’s stated goal was to use the study and spread of socialism to correct the “fundamentally imperfect” state of society. At inception, it had nine members.
Despite its modest size, the Club pledged to permeate the college. As Reed put it, “They sat not in lofty contempt above the ignorant student body, but mingled with it, learning its sympathies and weakness, used its machinery…” While club members held frequent discussions of their own, often continuing hours after midnight, they attempted to recruit and effect change by infiltrating other campus organizations.

This turned out to be an effective strategy. After less than five years, the Socialist Club had between 30 and 50 members. Two years after Reed’s graduation, a senior named Gerard C. Henderson, class of 1912, told the Harvard Graduates’ Magazine that the club’s “…fringes merge imperceptibly into a half-dozen political clubs, some adherents of such leaders as Wilson and La Follette, and others more vaguely representative of insurgency and progressivism.”

Reed was never officially a member, but the club still radicalized him. “It made me, and many others, realize that there was something going on in the dull outside world more thrilling than college activities,” he wrote.

Reed’s newfound politics were first evident in his writing. Reed had been writing for the Lampoon for a few years already, but during his senior year his sketches gained a biting political edge they’d lacked before.

In one Lampoon editorial, Reed mocked Harvard’s old money and gave advice to young men seeking to boost their pedigrees. “Hyphens are of immense value—remember that anyone will always be glad to lend money to an Endicott-Sears-Cabot, a Wendell-Wendell, or a Trumbull-Peabody,” he wrote. “If a child is too late to corral a Back Bay Brahman for a progenitor, let him seize upon a self-made man who has made a good job of it. Money will finally land anyone among the Captains of Society.”

Though Reed mocked them, the elite were beginning to notice him.

In the spring of Reed’s senior year, he was offered membership in the Hasty Pudding. The Pudding was one of the most exclusive social organizations on campus, made up almost entirely of members of Waiting and Final Clubs, and to Reed the invitation must have seemed like a baffling reversal on the part of the aristocracy. Certainly, he had distinguished himself in the years since he’d first been overlooked, but he was still the same brash Westerner he’d always been.

In truth, the Hasty Pudding didn’t have much of an option. It was nearly time for the club’s annual musical, and none of its existing members—who had been selected on the basis of social status—felt capable of writing lyrics. Reed was a necessary outside hire, and he knew it.

The Hasty Pudding put on an uncharacteristically subversive show that year.

“Just insist that your aunt was a Cabot,

And your grandmother’s real name was Weld.

Try hard to make rudeness a habit,

And be careful with whom you’re beheld.”

Revolution in the Yard
Suddenly, Reed was a “club man.” A critical one, certainly, but a club man all the same. And as much as he tried to suppress it, he found satisfaction in the title. That satisfaction became evident at the end of his senior year.
In 1910, Harvard’s rich lived in glamorous private apartments on Mt. Auburn Street; the poor lived in dorms in Harvard Yard. This dichotomy influenced more than sleeping arrangements: Residents of the Street controlled most aspects of undergraduate life, and overwhelmingly filled class offices at graduation. That year, Reed was their nominee for Ivy Orator.

Then, the Yard revolted. In an explosion of resentment that had been brewing since freshman fall, the Yard refused to accept the Street’s nominations for class office. Residents of the Yard circulated petitions and submitted their own nominees instead.

Reed was stuck. He already considered himself a man of the people, but aligning himself with the Yard would undo all of his recent social progress. So he ran on behalf of the Street, and like almost every other Street candidate, he lost.

There had been a revolution, and he was on the wrong side.

Reed realized his mistake once it was already too late. Shortly after his graduation, he wrote a sweeping 73-page tract called “The Harvard Renaissance,” in which he describes the rise of socialism at the college. In that text, he calls the victory of the Yard “a vote of the unrepresented majority against its traditional leaders.” It is the story of the Marxist struggle in all but name.

College was Reed’s first introduction to the vapid nature of the privileged class. “The more I met the college aristocrats, the more their cold cruel stupidity repelled me,” he wrote in his memoir. “I began to pity them for their lack of imagination, and the narrowness of their glittering lives—clubs, athletics, society.

“College is like the world; outside there is the same class of people, dull and sated and blind.”

Three years later, Reed spoke on behalf of silk workers in Paterson, N.J., earning himself his first jail term and a reputation as a radical communist. Frustrated but not deterred, he allied himself with the trade union International Workers of the World and organized thousands of workers into a strike benefit in Madison Square Garden. By the late 1910s, the American government feared him. The USSR hailed him as a genius and taught his name in schools.

Richard M. Nixon didn’t call Harvard “the Kremlin on the Charles” for nothing. John Reed might have practiced socialism in New York City and St. Petersburg, but he learned it in the Yard.

Club Man at Last
Reed’s life was prime martyr material, and Harvard’s later left-wingers ate it up—“John Reed Clubs” began popping up across the United States only shortly after the man’s death.

Harvard had a branch, too. Calling itself a Marxist study and action group, the Harvard John Reed Society was founded in 1932 by “a group of undergraduates attracted by the personality of John Reed and interested in studying sciettific [sic] socialism, the cause for which he gave his life.” Though it was never widely popular, the club lingered for years. In 1943, it even published several issues of a magazine, The Harvard Vanguard.

Reed’s mother did not approve. Charlotte J. Reed was always upset by John Reed Clubs—she found them exploitative.

Reed might have felt the same way. “In view of what has happened in Russia since the Revolution, I am certain that he would not have tolerated the use of his name as a means of ensnaring idealistic American youth into the Communist party,” Reed’s old friend and Dramatic Club co-founder Hans V. Kaltenborn, class of 1909, reflected in “Fifty Fabulous Years.” “That is what is being done at Harvard today. The John Reed Society has been little more than a cover for Communist party activities at Harvard since its inception.”

It wasn’t safe to join a club with such a reputation in McCarthy-era America. In 1950, the John Reed Society went underground.

According to The Boston Herald, the club had applied for a meeting room in the spring of 1950, and the administration had accepted. But when Dean Robert A. Watson reached out the following fall, he got crickets. No one would come forward to take the key.

“Last year’s president, Donald M. Long of New York, is no longer at Harvard, for academic reasons,” wrote the Herald. “Last year’s vice-president, Philip H. Ennis, said he is no longer associated with the club. Nobody else admits association.”

Harvard assured the public that it had not shut down the club, but students were suspicious. Arthur J. Sockol ’51, a senior who “identified himself as spokesman for the group,” wrote to The Boston Traveler. Though the university had allowed the club to continue functioning, he said, students feared retaliation.

The club was dead. And despite a smattering of radical left-leaning organizations that popped up throughout the ’60s and later—the Young Socialist Alliance, the Young People’s Socialist League, the Democratic Socialists of America—it stayed dead.

Signs of Life
In 2016, the radical left has re-entered the conversation. Bernie Sanders, a presidential nominee who calls himself a “democratic socialist,” is experiencing widespread success, particularly among young voters. In the Iowa primary, 84 percent of Democratic voters aged 17-29 supported Sanders. In the New Hampshire primary, that number was 83 percent. In a recent Chegg study of 1,363 college students, 6 percent self-identified as socialists.

Is John Reed’s crusade experiencing a revival?
He Li ’16, president of Harvard Students for Bernie, considers it a question of semantics. “Obviously Bernie calls himself a democratic socialist, [but] what’s more important to everybody I’ve talked to are his specific policies and what he stands for,” Li said. “The label of socialist, that comes second.”

Others feel differently. “One of the long-lasting impacts of Bernie Sanders’ campaign is the way that… he’s been able to change the conversation around “the s-word,” Tyrik LaCruise ’17, an avid Sanders supporter, said. “Running as a democratic socialist, people are like ‘Whoa, wait a second. It’s not as dirty as I thought. The post office is socialism. Public schools? Socialism. We have roads. That’s socialism.’”

Paul Adler, a lecturer in Harvard’s History and Literature concentration, is intrigued by that reclamation. “The Sanders phenomenon is blowing my mind…. He calls himself a socialist. According to the polls of Democratic party voters, a lot of people are OK calling themselves socialists,” he said. “Maybe it’s been enough time since the Cold War that there can be a renewed attempt at all this.”

If the Cold War and the Red Scare really are beginning to fade from cultural memory, then contemporary students might find themselves facing a form of socialism in some ways analogous to the one that faced Reed. After all, Reed grew up in a pre-Soviet world. As Adler pointed out, “People were scared of socialism and said negative things about it, but it had more a connotation of scary anarchy than totalitarianism.” The same could be said today.

In that case, perhaps we should take a close look at John Reed. His life reads like a short novel, gripping in its intensity and poignant in its brevity. He believed in an ideal, and it drove him through college, across Europe, and into the ground before he turned 33.

Adler suggests that we view the revolutionary as simultaneous warning and inspiration.

“I think the most truthful interpretation is that [Reed] encompasses both,” said Adler. “He’s a warning about the dangers of political idealism, about having a philosophy that the ends justify the means. But he’s also an inspiration about getting down in the muck and trying to create some sort of better society.”

Courtesy :thecrimson.com, futureofcapitalism.com

 

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Religion-based Nationalism is back in Full Force

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in BJP, Communalism, Current Affairs, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS, RELIGION, Religious Intolarence

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anti-colonialism, communalism, Hindu Rashtra, Hinduthwa, nationalism, Religion-based Nationalism, Romila Thapar, two-nation theory

Sabrang India – March 29, 2016

Written by Romila Thapar

In the 1960s we were confident that the use of religion for political mobilisation would decline because nationalism, namely, the secular, all-inclusive, anti-colonialism nationalism that brought us independence, would, despite Partition, be firmly established. This was in some ways such a firm belief that it was not thought necessary to specify the inclusion of secularism in the Constitution at the initial stage. This has not happened. Religion as political mobilisation, and religion-based identity as the core of nationalism, sometimes called communalism, is back in full force.

Historians and other social scientists do not make predictions. Our inability to do so is because there may always be some irrational factor in our society that intervenes. So we can only analyse what went wrong and make some suggestions for how to put it right.

It is useful to consider the changing contours of communalism in post-colonial India since the parameters and the historical context are no longer the same as they were in colonial times. There was, to begin with, an anti-colonial relatively secular nationalism that pre-dated and was distinct from communalism, both Muslim and Hindu.

Communalism was born out of colonial policy, and took as its foundation the dubious two-nation theory that culminated in two categories of communalism – Muslim and Hindu. The first led to the creation of Pakistan. Hindu communalism is awaiting its fulfillment.

Communalism continues to have a role in the politics of post-colonial India, but this is not identical with its earlier role. The prime reason for anti-colonial secular nationalism has ostensibly been removed after independence, since we are no longer a colony and do not require an anti-colonial nationalism. But we still have to contend with the kind of communalism, that is aspiring to a Hindu Rashtra, of the 1930s vintage.

Interestingly the defining of this form of a nation, is embedded in the colonial interpretation of Indian society. It goes back to the nineteenth century interpretation of Indian history by James Mill who spoke of the two nations that have always constituted India – namely, the Hindu and the Muslim.

The two-nation theory fueled communalism, assisted by another colonial contribution which was the Census that led to describing Indian society as consisting of a majority community and minority communities. To this was added the colonial theory of the foundation of Indian civilisation being the Aryanism of the Vedas. This contributed to the concept of the nation as a Hindu Rashtra and the Hindu therefore being the primary citizen of India.

Whereas the major nationalism of anti-colonialism led the movement for independence, the colonial perceptions of the history and society of India, gave root to the two communal nationalisms in the form of the Muslim league and the Hindu Mahasabha – to be replaced with the RSS. These latter two did not support secular anti-colonial nationalism but instead focused on opposing each other.

Subsequent to Independence, secular nationalism was no longer confronting a colonial power, but instead, it had to confront the power of identity politics that draws on religious extremism. The need for awareness to check the activities of religious extremism was under-estimated. Both Islamisation and Hindutva took the path of concretising Islamic and Hindu identities as oppositional.

Indian Governments have each to a greater or lesser extent, been party to such politics. We have experienced extreme violence against various minorities – Muslim, Sikh, Christian, Dalits. It has been and continues to be a serious threat to democracy in India.

It is difficult to establish a functioning democracy in a society where there are special categories of privileged and under-privileged groups, and majority and minority communities based on religious identities with varying rights ; and an ideology that endorses the two-nation theory, where religion, caste, and language, become identities. It is difficult because democracy requires the reverse of this – it means equal rights for all and an equality in laws applicable to all citizens.

Many of our problems come from an unquestioned inheritance that we have accepted of colonial policy, administration and law. We continue to base our identities derived from religion and caste on those that the colonial system imposed on us. If we were to question these, something different may well emerge.

I often wonder whether all post-colonial societies nurture continuity and conservatism by clinging to what their colonizers had taught them about who and what they were and are ?

Communalism was born out of colonial policy, and took as its foundation the dubious two-nation theory that culminated in two categories of communalism – Muslim and Hindu. The first led to the creation of Pakistan. Hindu communalism is awaiting its fulfillment.

It would be interesting to do a comparative study with African and Caribbean nationalism, for instance, that saw the emergence of theories such as Negritude and where people read Aimee Cesare and Leopold Senghor when constructing their nationalisms. Did they also go back to colonial versions of their past or did they question these versions?

Are the ideologies of religious and cultural extremism invariably drawn from the interpretations of the society and culture of the ex-colony as constructed by the colonisers ? In other words do we have to endorse the identities that British colonialism imposed on us? Can we not instead question these identities and consider alternatives. The continuation of such identities is inherently anti-democratic. They were meant for a colony not for a free democracy.

This debate has been going on for a while now. There is a need to change the premises.

Instead of speaking of the past only in terms of who victimised whom, (and as we all know such theories of victimisation are easily constructed), we should instead look more carefully at what we want from the present and what from the past can help us construct a more positive present.

We have to recognise that we too, like every other society with a long past, have not been a society characterized by tolerance and non-violence. However much we may wish to believe that we were tolerant and non-violent, it simply isn’t true.

Such theories served their purpose in the days when we were contesting colonialism. But they are not of much help now with the constant daily actions that we witness or even experience, of intolerance and violence, and it seems to increase by the day. But we cannot suddenly have become violent and intolerant. There have to have been some elements of such behaviour in us in the past as well, which we perhaps kept under better control. It would be salutary to investigate why there was less of violence and intolerance in the past, if that was so?

Our texts from pre-Islamic times tell us that there were two streams of dharma that were dominant – the Brahmanical and the Shramanic. The latter were the Buddhists, Jainas, Ajivikas and such like. There are rulers that insistently call for tolerance among the sects as in the edicts of Ashoka Maurya, or there are references to conflicts between sects in Sanskrit texts, or in accounts of visitors to India in those times.

Patanjali, the great grammarian of around the second century BC, refers to the two streams of dharmaas dominant, and adds that their relationship can be compared to that of the snake and the mongoose. Buddhism was finally exiled from India. Sectarian conflicts continued into Islamic times with now an additional factor.

As far as intolerance goes, we must also remind ourselves that every religion in India discriminated against what we today call the Dalits. Even the religions that claimed that all men are equal in the eyes of God, did not give them equality.

Islam and Christianity did not have a category of Dalits outside India, but in India, Muslim, Christian and Sikh Dalits were segregated and lived separately. These are aspects of our society that we still have to come to terms with. We cannot claim to have been a tolerant society in the past by ignoring our treatment of some sections of society that we are now trying to amend. Intolerance does not refer only to religion. It also refers to the demeaning of another human being.

If we want a democracy then it has inevitably to be secular, and not give rights to privileged groups. This is irrespective of whether the claim is that such rights are justified by status or by numbers. It means that institutions of society have to be so organized that privileging a group becomes redundant.

This means a constant check on the functioning of those institutions that sustain a democracy to ensure that they are doing so. This also means being aware, for instance, that institutions of education where we learn about secular democracy, and are socialised to belonging to a democratic society, are not dismantled, or are replaced with teaching that is anti-democratic. This is a serious threat.

It also means changing the mind-set of institutions and people to encourage them to understand and support a democratic society.

What are the major institutions that would be involved with this?

The Constitution is based on values of secular democracy but most of us know so little about it. Perhaps we should be more aware of how it defends democracy. This would also involve greater knowledge about the functioning of the judiciary – so crucial to the current many crises.

We have to recognise that we too, like every other society with a long past, have not been a society characterized by tolerance and non-violence. However much we may wish to believe that we were tolerant and non-violent, it simply isn’t true.

The Code of Civil Laws should be geared to eliminating the continuing discrimination against Dalits, Adivasis and women. We also need to check from time to time to ascertain as to how affirmative action is working and who is benefitting from it.It does seem curious – and this question is now being commonly asked – as to why dominant castes in so many parts of the nation are taking to violence to ensure that they be given reservation rights, some of which are reserved only for those that have an under-privileged status.

A major positive change can be brought about if quality education is made available to all. The aim should not be just for literacy but also to teaching the young how to think, how to question their world, and how to improve it. The aim should be to impart how to handle knowledge and why this is important. Education is not just the acquiring of information. We have to remember that in the coming generation virtually half the population will be young adults with aspirations.

We have to ensure basic human rights so that five hundred million Indians can live with dignity. We have to think of how we can perhaps insist that our administrators, those that run our institutions as well as those that are required to protect us, be taught that their prime function is to protect the rights and the person of the Indian citizen ? Subservience to authority is not what is required from them. They have to be encouraged to be helpful to the citizen.

May be that if we begin to make these our demands and do so with a firm commitment, then some of the indignities associated with the communal mind-set, and that are so common in our society, may start to fade.

Communalism is ultimately an attitude of mind among people based on the assumption that whatever is told to them by their mentors is all they need to know. It shows a disinterest in knowing better. To focus therefore solely on the rights of religious communities – whether of the majority or the minority – ultimately has a limited purpose. This will not terminate communalism.

It seems to me that we have to think of other ways by which identities are defined. We seem to have arrived at a point when communal ideas and activities are taken as legitimate nationalism. We have to disentangle nationalism from communalism. No group has a monopoly on claiming that its activities alone, constitute nationalism, and all others are anti-national. We have to reconstruct nationalism in an inclusive, secular mode, to allow every Indian to participate equally and with equal rights.

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Revised Child Fare Rule becomes applicable for train journey from 21st April, 2016 onwards.

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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Child Fare, Indian Railways, train journey

Advance booking of reserved tickets under this revised child fare rule has already started in December 2015 for journey date 21st April, 2016 onwards.
 Ministry of Railways has decided to revise the child fare rule. Under the revised provision, full adult fare will be charged for children of age 5 years and under 12 years of age if for whom full separate berth/seat (in reserved class) is sought at the time of reservation. However, in case full separate berth/seat is not sought for the children of age 5 years and under 12 years of age at the time of reservation,  then half of the adult fare shall continue to be charged subject to the minimum distance for charging.                  This revised child fare rule has been made applicable for travel from 21st April, 2016 onwards. Advance booking of reserved tickets for children under this revised rule has already started in December 2015 for journey date of 21stApril, 2016 onwards.          While filling up reservation form, the passenger can indicate their option for requirement of full berth/seat for childor not.

There is no change in the rule for child fare of unreserved tickets i.e. fare for children of 5-12 yearsfor unreserved tickets shall continue to be half of the adult fare subject to the minimum distance for charging.

Children under five years of age will continue to be carried free (without berth) in case of both reserved andunreserved classes.

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Index of Eight Core Industries (Base: 2004-05=100) February, 2016

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Economics, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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Cement, Core Industries, electricity, Fertilizers, Index of Eight Core Industries, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, steel

 

  1. The summary of the Index of Eight Core Industries (base: 2004-05) is given at the Annexure.

2.         The Eight Core Industries comprise nearly 38% of the weight of items included in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).The combined Index of Eight Core Industries stands at 172.2 in February, 2016, which was 5.7 %highercompared to the index of February, 2015. Its cumulative growth during April to February, 2015-16 was 2.3 %.

Coal

3.         Coal production (weight: 4.38%) increased by 3.9 % inFebruary, 2016over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 increased by 5.0% over corresponding period of previous year.

Crude Oil

4.         Crude Oil production (weight: 5.22%) increased by 0.8 % in February, 2016over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 decreased by 1.0 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

Natural Gas

5.         The Natural Gas production (weight: 1.71%) increased by 1.2 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 declined by 3.6 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

 

Refinery Products (93% of Crude Throughput)

6.         Petroleum Refinery production (weight: 5.94%) increased by 8.1 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 increased by 3.1 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

Fertilizers

7.         Fertilizer production (weight: 1.25%)increased by 16.3 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 increased by 10.3 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

Steel (Alloy + Non-Alloy)

8.         Steel production (weight: 6.68%) declined by 0.5 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 declined by 1.8 %over the corresponding period of previous year.

Cement

9.         Cement production (weight: 2.41%) increasedby 13.5 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 increased by 3.9 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

Electricity

10.       Electricity generation (weight: 10.32%)increased by 9.2 % in February, 2016 over February, 2015. Its cumulative index during April to February, 2015-16 increased by 4.6 % over the corresponding period of previous year.

 Note 1:Data are provisional. Revision has been made based on revised data received for corresponding month of previous year in respect of Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Product, Steel, Cement and Electricity. Accordingly, indices for the month February, 2015 have been revised.

Note 2: Release of the index for March, 2016 will be on Monday, 2nd May, 2016.

Annexure

Performance of Eight Core Industries

Yearly Index & Growth Rate

Base Year: 2004-05=100

INDEX

Sector Weight 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 Apr-Feb 2014-15 Apr-Feb 2015-16
Coal 4.379 139.7 141.5 148.1 150.0 162.5 157.2 165.0
Crude Oil 5.216 111.0 112.1 111.4 111.2 110.2 109.9 108.8
Natural Gas 1.708 164.4 149.7 128.1 111.5 106.0 105.9 102.1
Refinery Products 5.939 129.7 133.7 172.5 175.0 175.6 175.0 180.5
Fertilizers 1.254 103.4 103.8 100.2 101.8 101.7 102.2 112.7
Steel 6.684 157.7 174.0 181.1 201.9 211.8 211.3 207.5
Cement 2.406 164.2 175.2 188.7 194.5 205.2 204.0 212.0
Electricity 10.316 138.1 149.3 155.3 164.6 178.5 178.7 187.0
Overall Index 37.903 138.4 145.3 154.7 161.2 168.6 167.7 171.6

 

GROWTH RATES (in %)

Sector Weight 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 Apr-Feb 2014-15 Apr-Feb 2015-16
Coal 4.379 -0.2 1.3 4.6 1.3 8.3 8.6 5.0
Crude Oil 5.216 11.9 1.0 -0.6 -0.2 -0.9 -1.1 -1.0
Natural Gas 1.708 10.0 -8.9 -14.5 -13.0 -4.9 -5.3 -3.6
Refinery Products# 5.939 3.0 3.1 29.0 1.5 0.4 0.5 3.1
Fertilizers 1.254 0.0 0.4 -3.4 1.5 -0.1 -0.5 10.3
Steel 6.684 13.2 10.3 4.1 11.5 4.9 5.9 -1.8
Cement 2.406 4.5 6.7 7.7 3.1 5.5 6.6 3.9
Electricity 10.316 5.6 8.1 4.0 6.0 8.4 9.0 4.6
Overall Index 37.903 6.6 5.0 6.5 4.2 4.6 5.0 2.3

 

#Refinery Products’ yearly growth rate of 2012-13 is not comparable with other years on account of inclusion of RIL (SEZ) production data since April, 2012.

Performance of Eight Core Industries

Monthly Index & Growth Rate

Base Year: 2004-05=100

 

INDEX

Sector Coal Crude Oil Natural Gas Refinery Products Fertilizers Steel Cement Electricity Overall Index
Weight 4.379 5.216 1.708 5.939 1.254 6.684 2.406 10.316 37.903
Feb-15 184.4 101.5 95.7 166.0 97.5 203.6 204.9 165.9 162.9
Mar-15 220.4 113.9 107.2 182.5 96.9 217.3 217.4 175.9 177.8
Apr-15 156.0 106.6 100.9 161.3 87.3 201.3 213.6 176.0 162.4
May-15 156.5 112.5 107.8 186.0 101.8 231.7 221.3 194.0 178.6
Jun-15 148.1 109.5 102.9 183.9 105.3 221.1 215.0 181.8 171.2
Jul-15 134.7 110.7 99.0 176.2 111.3 206.3 209.7 190.3 168.0
Aug-15 139.0 112.8 107.2 185.1 119.0 197.5 197.2 194.3 169.6
Sep-15 143.2 107.4 103.9 170.3 119.4 197.5 195.8 194.4 166.8
Oct-15 168.4 111.3 105.6 172.5 122.1 209.4 207.4 201.1 175.4
Nov-15 180.3 107.3 102.6 185.9 118.4 194.6 185.9 174.2 166.8
Dec-15 197.4 108.7 103.4 190.2 122.6 203.6 217.9 182.4 175.7
Jan-16 200.4 107.3 92.5 194.7 118.5 216.7 236.1 187.3 180.7
Feb-16 191.5 102.3 96.9 179.4 113.4 202.6 232.5 181.2 172.2

 

 

GROWTH RATES (in %)
Sector Coal Crude Oil Natural Gas Refinery Products Fertilizers Steel Cement Electricity Overall Index
Weight 4.379 5.216 1.708 5.939 1.254 6.684 2.406 10.316 37.903
Feb-15 10.8 -1.9 -8.1 -1.0 -0.4 -0.6 2.2 5.9 2.3
Mar-15 6.0 1.7 -1.5 -1.3 5.2 -4.4 -4.2 1.7 -0.1
Apr-15 7.9 -2.7 -3.6 -2.9 0.0 0.6 -2.4 -1.1 -0.4
May-15 7.8 0.8 -3.1 7.9 1.3 2.6 2.6 5.5 4.4
Jun-15 6.3 -0.7 -5.9 7.5 5.8 4.9 2.6 0.2 3.0
Jul-15 0.3 -0.4 -4.4 2.9 8.6 -2.6 1.3 3.5 1.1
Aug-15 0.4 5.6 3.7 5.8 12.6 -5.9 5.4 5.6 2.6
Sep-15 1.9 -0.1 0.9 0.5 18.1 -2.5 -1.5 10.8 3.2
Oct-15 6.3 -2.1 -1.8 -4.4 16.2 -1.2 11.7 8.8 3.2
Nov-15 3.5 -3.3 -3.9 2.5 13.5 -8.4 -1.8 0.0 -1.3
Dec-15 6.1 -4.1 -6.1 2.1 13.1 -4.4 3.2 2.7 0.9
Jan-16 9.1 -4.6 -15.3 4.8 6.2 -2.8 9.0 6.0 2.9
Feb-16 3.9 0.8 1.2 8.1 16.3 -0.5 13.5 9.2 5.7

 

 

***

DJM/nb

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India’s External Debt Data at End December 2015

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Economics, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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Economic Affairs, India’s External Debt

Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance has been compiling and releasing quarterly statistics on India’s external debt for the quarters ending September and December every year.

At end-December 2015, India’s external debt stock stood at US$ 480.2 billion, recording an increase of US$ 4.9 billion (1.0 per cent) over the level at end-March 2015. The rise in external debt during the period was due to long-term external debt particularly commercial borrowings and NRI deposits. However, on a sequential basis, total external debt at end-December 2015 declined by US$ 1.2 billion from the end-September 2015 level.

Long-term debt at end-December 2015 was US$ 398.6 billion, showing an increase of US$ 8.8 billion (2.3 per cent) over the level at end-March 2015. Short-term external debt witnessed a decline of 4.6 per cent and stood at US$ 81.6 billion at end-December 2015.

At end-December 2015, long-term external debt accounted for 83.0 per cent of India’s total external debt, while the remaining (17 per cent) was short-term debt. Component-wise, the share of commercial borrowings stood highest at 38.2 per cent of total external debt, followed by NRI deposits (25.5 per cent) and multilateral debt (11.1 per cent).

Government (sovereign) external debt stood at US$ 90.7 billion at end-December 2015 while non-Government debt amounted to US$ 389.5 billion. The share of Government (Sovereign) and non-Government debt in the total external debt was 18.9 per cent and 81.1 per cent respectively, at end-December 2015.

The share of US dollar denominated debt continued to be the highest in external debt stock at 57.6 per cent at end-December 2015, followed by the Indian rupee (28.7 per cent), SDR (5.8 per cent), Japanese yen (4.1 per cent), and euro (2.3 per cent).

The ratio of concessional debt to total external debt was 8.7 per cent at end-December 2015 (8.8 per cent at end-March 2015).

India’s foreign exchange reserves provided a cover of 73.0 per cent to the total external debt stock at end-December 2015 vis-à-vis 67.5 per cent at end-March 2015.

The ratio of short term external debt to foreign exchange reserves was 23.3 per cent at end-December 2015 as against 26.7 per cent at end-March 2015.

The complete quarterly report of India’s external debt at end-December 2015 is available on the website of Ministry of Finance – www.finmin.nic.in.

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Under-recoveries for the month of April 2016 will be Rs 8.73 per litre in case of PDS Kerosene

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Economics, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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Domestic LPG, lpg, PDS Kerosene, under-recoveries

The Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC) under the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas has reviewed international prices of crude oil and petroleum products for the month of March 2016. In the case of PDS Kerosene, the under-recoveries for the month of April 2016 will be Rs 8.73 per litre (Rs 6.58 per litre in last month). The cash transfer to customer under DBTL will be Rs. 90.37, out of which Rs. 42.11 will be Cash Compensation on Domestic LPG by Govt. to consumers & Rs 48.26 will be the Cash compensation on Domestic LPG by OMCs towards ‘Uncompensated Costs’ to consumers.

Product-wise Under-recoveries of Public Sector Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs):

Product Unit Under / (Over) recovery (eff. 1st April 16) Cash transfer to customer under DBTL(eff. 1st Apr 16)
PDS Kerosene* (Rs./Litre) 8.73 –
Cash Compensation on Domestic LPG by Govt. to consumers** (Rs./Cylinder) – 42.11
Cash Compensation on Domestic LPG by OMCs towards ‘Uncompensated Costs’ to consumers** (Rs./Cylinder) – 48.26

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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lackadaisical attitude in rehabilitation of 740 rescued bonded child labourers from Rajasthan

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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Bihar, bonded child labourers, Jharkhand, NHRC, Rajasthan, rehabilitation, UP, West Bengal

 

New Delhi, 1st April, 2016

The National Human Rights Commission has taken it very seriously that six States have “adopted lackadaisical attitude” in the rehabilitation of 740 bonded child labourers rescued from various parts of Rajasthan during March, 2013 to July, 2014.  These States include, Rajasthan, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and NCT of Delhi.  Notices have been issued for specific actions to the concerned authorities in all the six States with directions to submit action taken reports within eight weeks without fail.

The Commission found, during the course of enquiry, that 740 child labourers were rescued.  They included maximum 610 from Bihar and the rest 130 from Jharkhand, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and Rajasthan.  But Release Certificates were issued for only 456 children from Bihar.  However, they were not given copies of the Release Certificates by the concerned authorities in Rajasthan.

Release Certificates for 284 rescued bonded child labourers were yet to be issued, which are essential to start their rehabilitation process in their respective States by the concerned District administration.

Mr. Justice D. Murugesan, Member, NHRC has observed that no heed seems to have been paid to the miseries of the children.  The issue of the rescue of child labourers is not merely an instance of employing a child in violation of laws.  It is rather more heinous in nature that children are being taken from one State to another, which cannot happen without the involvement of human/child traffickers.

He also observed that no report has been submitted by the State agencies of the six State Governments regarding the action taken plan to curb this menace of child trafficking, which requires to be handled with a coordinated approach to prevent such instances in future.  Therefore, the allegation of the complainant that the human/child traffickers have not been dealt with in accordance with law, required to be investigated in an impartial and transparent manner.

Accordingly, notices have been issued to the Chief Secretary and Director General of Police, Government of Rajasthan to get the cases of these 740 rescued child bonded labourers investigated through CB-CID at headquarters.  The report shall inter-alia contain the identification of children belonging to Schedule Caste/Schedule Tribe, if any.

A notice has been issued to the Labour Commissioner, Government of Rajasthan, calling for an action taken report, indicating the reasons for non-issue of the Release Certificates.  The report shall contain the measures taken for recovery of outstanding wages and rehabilitation amount from the concerned employers, including Rs.20 thousand for each rescued child and penal action taken against the offenders involved in child labour and child trafficking.

Further, notices have been issued to the Chief Secretaries, Directors General of Police/Commissioner of Police and Labour Commissioners of Governments of Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and NCT of Delhi to submit comprehensive action taken report, indicating the rehabilitation of released child labourers and penal action taken against the offenders involved in the alleged child trafficking.  They have also been asked to submit report about the steps taken to prevent occurrence of child trafficking/labour in future.

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మోడీ పాలనలో వుపాధి పెరిగిందా ? తరిగిందా ?

01 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by raomk in BJP, Current Affairs, Economics, INDIA, NATIONAL NEWS

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CMIE, employment, Employment generation, India employment, Narendra Modi rule

ఎం కోటేశ్వరరావు

    ప్రధాని గద్దె నెక్కిన తరువాత నరేంద్రమోడీ మాట్లాడటం ఆగిపోయి వుండవచ్చుగానీ కాలం ఆగలేదు. మరికొద్ది వారాలలో రెండవ వార్షికోత్సవం జరుపుకోవటానికి, వెంకయ్య నాయుడి వంటి వందిమాగధుల స్తోత్ర పారాయణాలు వినటానికి, విజయాల గురించి చెప్పుకోవటానికి సిద్ధం అవుతున్నారు.ఈరెండు సంవత్సరాల కాలంలో జనానికి దేశంలో అసలేం జరుగుతోంది అన్నది పూర్తిగా తెలియటం లేదు అనే అభిప్రాయం బలపడుతోంది. ఎంత వరకు నిజమో ఎవరికి వారు తమ అనుభవంతో తేల్చుకోవాలి. ఆవు,ఎద్దులు, గొడ్డు మాంస రాజకీయాలు, హత్యల మొదలు తాజాగా దేశభక్తులా కాదా అనటానికి భారతమాతాకి జై అన్నారా లేదా అన్న గీటురాయిని నిర్ణయించిన సంఘపరివార్‌ అజెండా ప్రధానంగా నడుస్తోంది. కమ్యూనిస్టులకు జనవాదం, మతశక్తులకు మనువాదం(మైనారిటీ మతశక్తులకు వాటి ఛాందసవాదాలు ఎలాగూ వుంటాయి) తప్ప మరొకటి పట్టదు. భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీ అన్న తరువాత ఈ రాజకీయాలు చేయకపోతే వారికి మనుగడ వుండదు కనుక కొత్తగా దాని గురించి చెప్పుకోవాల్సిన అవసరం లేదు. మొత్తం జనానికి సంబంధించి ముఖ్యంగా యువత గురించి, మిగతా విషయాల గురించి అధికార ఓడ ఎక్కక ముందు ఎన్‌డిఏ ఏం చెప్పింది,ఎక్కిన తరువాత ఏం చేస్తోంది?ఏం చెబుతోంది అన్నది ఎవరు అంగీకరించినా అంగీకరించకపోయినా చాలా తక్కువగా తెలుస్తోంది.

    ప్రధాని పదవిలో కూర్చున్న తరువాత నరేంద్రమోడీ వుపాధి కల్పన, నైపుణ్య అభివృద్ధికి పది అంశాలతో కూడిన ఒక పధకాన్ని ప్రకటించిన విషయం బిగ్గరగా వినిపిస్తున్న భారతమాతకు జై నినాదాల మధ్య జనానికి గుర్తు చేయటం అవసరం.ప్రధాని ఎక్కువ కాలం విదేశాల్లో ఎందుకు గడిపారంటే మేకిన్‌ ఇండియా కార్యక్రమానికి పెట్టుబడుల ఆకర్షణ కోసం తప్ప విహార యాత్రలు చేయటం లేదని బిజెపి పెద్దలు మండినపుడు జనం కామోసు అనుకున్నారు.

    ప్రధాన మంత్రిగా పది నెలలు అధికారంలో వున్న తరువాత తొలిసారిగా హిందుస్థాన్‌ టైమ్స్‌ అనే ఒక పత్రికతో నరేంద్రమోడీ నోరు విప్పారు.రాజకీయాలు, పాలన, ఆర్ధిక విషయాలలో ప్రపంచంలో భారత దేశ విస్వసనీయతను పునరుద్ధరించామని, ప్రపంచ రాడార్‌లో మన దేశం తిరిగి కనిపిస్తున్నదని చెప్పారు. నరేంద్రమోడీ ప్రభుత్వం తొలి ఆరునెలల్లో 2.75లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు సృష్టించింది అని ఫైనాన్సియల్‌ ఎక్స్‌ప్రెస్‌ పత్రిక ఒక వార్తను ప్రచురించింది. అంతకు ముందు సంవత్సరం అదే కాలంలో కేవలం లక్షా ఇరవై వేల వుద్యోగాలు మాత్రమే గత ప్రభుత్వం సృష్టించింది. అంటే మోడీ 118శాతం అదనంగా సృష్టించటానికి కారణం 25 రంగాలలో మేకిన్‌ ఇండియా కార్యక్రమ శుభ ప్రారంభమని దానిలో పేర్కొన్నారు.నైపుణ్య శిక్షణ గురించి ఆర్ధిక మంత్రిత్వశాఖ 2014-15 వార్షిక నివేదికలో 2022 నాటికి 50 కోట్ల మందికి నైపుణ్యం కలిగించటం అవసరమని పేర్కొన్నారు. ప్రయివేటు రంగ భాగస్వామ్యంతో 15 కోట్ల మందికి నైపుణ్య శిక్షణ ఇవ్వాలని జాతీయ నైపుణ్య శిక్షణ అభివృద్ధి కార్పొరేషన్‌ లక్ష్యంగా పెట్టుకోగా గతేడాది జూన్‌ నాటికి 51లక్షల మందికి శిక్షణ ఇచ్చారని, వారిలో 15లక్షల మందికి వుపాధి దొరికినట్లు ఆ వార్త వివరించింది.

    గతేడాది ఏప్రిల్‌ 17వ తేదీన ఇండియన్‌ ఎక్స్‌ప్రెస్‌ ప్రచురించిన వార్త ప్రకారం గత ఆర్ధిక సంవత్సరంలో ఎనిమిది కీలక రంగాలలో మూడవ త్రైమాసికంలో అంతకు ముందు మూడు త్రైమాసికాల కంటే వుద్యోగఅవకాశాలు గణనీయంగా తగ్గిపోయాయి. 2014 అక్టోబరు-డిసెంబరు మాసాలలో కేవలం 1.17లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు రాగా అంతకు ముందు సెప్టెంబరుతో ముగిసిన త్రైమాసికంలో 1.58, ఏప్రిల్‌-జూన్‌లో 1.82లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు వచ్చాయి. ఇలా అంకెలను పేర్కొంటూ పోతే ఆల్జీబ్రా మైండ్‌ గాబరా అని ఒకప్పుడు అనుకున్న విధంగా బుర్ర తిరిగి పోతుంది. అంకెలను ఎలా అయినా వినియోగించుకోవచ్చన్నది ఆరునెలల విజయ గాధ, రెండవది ఏడాది పాలన అసలు గాధ వెల్లడించింది. మా తాతలు నేతులు తాగారు కావాలంటే మా మూతులు వాసన చూడండి అని చెప్పుకుంటే కుదరదు. ఇప్పుడేంటి ? మాకేంటి అన్న ప్రశ్నలకు సమాధానాలు కావాలి? నరేంద్రమోడీ లేదా ఆయన భక్త బృందంగానీ ఏం చెబుతుందో తెలియదు.

     గురువారం నాడు(మార్చి 31) హిందూ పత్రిక ‘వుపాధి పెరుగుదల ఆరు సంవత్సరాల కనిష్టానికి పడిపోయింది’ అనే శీర్షికతో వార్తను ప్రచురించింది.దాని సారాంశం ఇలా వుంది. కేంద్ర ప్రభుత్వ కార్మికశాఖ కార్మికులు ఎక్కువగా అవసరం వుండే ఎనిమిది కీలక రంగాలలో సేకరించిన సమాచారం ప్రకారం 2015 తొలి తొమ్మిది మాసాలలో కేవలం 1.55లక్షల నూతన వుద్యోగాలు మాత్రమే నికరంగా వచ్చాయి. ఇది ఆరు సంవత్సరాలలో కనిష్టం. ఇదే సమయాలలో 2013,14 సంవత్సరాలలో మూడు లక్షలకు పైగా వుద్యోగాలు వచ్చినట్లు కార్మికశాఖ సమాచారం తెలిపింది. ఇది ఆరోగ్యకరమైన సూచిక కాదని విశ్లేషకులు పేర్కొన్నారు. ‘ మన పారిశ్రామిక అభివృద్ధి తక్కువగా వుంది,వుత్పత్తి పెరినపుడు మాత్రమే వుపాధి వుంటుంది.కార్పొరేట్‌ రంగంలో పెద్ద ఎత్తున సిబ్బందిని క్రమబద్దీకరిస్తున్నారు.ప్రభుత్వం రంగం కూడా కార్మికులను నియమించటం లేదు. అభివృద్ధి ప్రధాన ఆశయం వుద్యోగ కల్పన. అంతిమంగా మనం అన్ని స్ధాయిలలో వుద్యోగాలను సృష్టించాలి. అదే జరగటం లేదు.’ అని కేర్‌ రేటింగ్‌ సంస్ధ ప్రధాన ఆర్ధికవేత్త మదన్‌ సబ్నవిస్‌ చెప్పారు.

     కేంద్ర కార్మిక శాఖ వుద్యోగకల్పన గురించి 2009 నుంచి ప్రతి మూడు మాసాలకు ఒకసారి సర్వే నిర్వహిస్తున్నది. వస్త్ర, తోళ్ల,లోహ, ఆటోమొబైల్‌, ఆభరణాలు, రవాణా, చేనేత, ఐటి రంగాలలో ప్రపంచ ఆర్ధిక సంక్షోభ ప్రభావం ఎలా పడింది అనే అధ్యయనం కోసం ఈ సర్వే నిర్వహిస్తున్నారు. గత కొన్ని సంవత్సరాలలో ప్రతి ఏడాది జనవరి నుంచి సెప్టెంబరు వరకు వివరాలు ఇలా వున్నాయి. 2009లో నికరంగా 2.49లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు పెరిగాయి.(2009 జనవరి-మార్చిలో 1.17, ఏప్రిల్‌-జూన్‌లో 1.31లక్షలు తగ్గగా జూలై-సెప్టెంబరులో 4.97లక్షలు పెరిగాయి. ఈ కాలంలో నికర పెరుగుదల 2.49లక్షలు) ఇదే విధంగా 2011లో 7.04లక్షలు, 2013లో 3.36లక్షలు, 2015లో 1.55లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు నికరంగా పెరిగాయి. కేంద్ర ప్రభుత్వ కార్మిక శాఖ అధికారికంగా వెల్లడించిన ఈ సమాచారంపై కొంతమంది ఆశ్చర్యం వ్యక్తం చేస్తున్నారు. ఇండియన్‌ స్టాఫింగ్‌ ఫెడరేషన్‌ అధ్యక్షుడు రితుపర్ణ చక్రవర్తి దీని గురించి మాట్లాడుతూ ‘ స్టాఫింగ్‌ పరిశ్రమ ఆరోగ్యకరంగా 18-20శాతం పెరుగుతోంది.కార్మిక శాఖ విడుదల చేసిన సమాచారం వుద్యోగ పెరుగుదల గురించి సమగ్ర చిత్రాన్ని ఇవ్వటం లేదు.అనేక రంగాలను అది స్వీకరించలేదు’ అన్నారు. 2015లో కాంట్రాక్టు వుద్యోగుల నియామకం గణనీయంగా తగ్గినట్లు లేబర్‌ బ్యూరో పేర్కొన్నది. వుపాధి కల్పన లేదా కోల్పోయిన వుపాధి గురించి సమగ్ర సమాచారం సేకరించటం మన దేశంలో సాధ్యం కాదు.ఎందుకంటే అసలు అధికారికంగా నమోదు అన్నది సమగ్రం కాదు. ధోరణులు మాత్రమే మనకు తెలుస్తాయి. కేంద్ర కార్మిక శాఖ ప్రభుత్వ విభాగం కనుక వున్నంతలో దాని సమాచారాన్ని ప్రాతిపదికగా తీసుకోవటం తప్ప మరొక మార్గం లేదు

     వుపాధి కల్పన గురించి కొన్ని సందర్భాలలో ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోడీతో సహా ఇతరులు ఏం చెప్పారో చూడండి.’ కేవలం వాగ్దానాలు మాత్రమే అద్బుతాలను సృష్టించవు’ అని మోడీ పాలన ఇరవై నెలల తరువాత ఈ ఏడాది ఫిబ్రవరి నాలుగున బెంగలూరులో ప్రముఖ పారిశ్రామికవేత్త రతన్‌ టాటా చెప్పారు. విదేశీయలు మన సరిహద్దులు దాటి పెట్టుబడులు పెట్టేందుకు భారత్‌లో ప్రవేశించటం లేదన్నది టాటాతో సహా ప్రముఖ పారిశ్రామికవేత్తల అంతరంగం, బహిరంగం కూడా. ప్రపంచ పెట్టుబడిదారీ దేశాలలో ఆర్ధిక మాంద్యం 2008 నుంచి అనేక సమస్యలను ముందుకు తెస్తోంది. పెట్టుబడిదారులు తమకు ఎక్కడ అప్పనంగా లాభాలు వస్తాయో అక్కడికే పెట్టుబడులను తరలిస్తున్నారు. నరేంద్రమోడీ, చంద్రబాబు వంటి వారు జనం సొమ్ము ఖర్చు చేసి ఎన్ని విదేశీ పర్యటనలు చేసినా అయ్యగారి సంపాదన అమ్మగారి బుట్టలోలకులకు చాలటం లేదన్నట్లుగా పరిస్థితి తయారైంది.

    మన దేశంలో పెట్టుబడుల గురించి అధ్యయనం చేసే భారతీయ ఆర్ధిక పర్యవేక్షణ కేంద్రం( సెంటర్‌ ఫర్‌ మోనిటరింగ్‌ ఇండియన్‌ ఎకానమీ(సిఎంఐఇ) కూర్చిన సమాచారం ఇంతవరకు ఏ మాత్రం ఆశాజనకంగా లేదు. 2015 మూడవ త్రైమాసికంలో నూతన సామర్ధ్య కల్పనకు ప్రతిపాదనలు అంతకు ముందుతో పోల్చితే 74శాతం తగ్గిపోయాయి.కేవలం లక్ష కోట్లరూపాయల విలువగల 383 పధకాలు మాత్రమే ప్రకటించబడ్డాయి. ఇది అంతకు ముందు ఐదు త్రైమాసికాల కంటే కనిష్టం. అన్ని రంగాలలో తగ్గుదల కనిపిస్తోందని, కచ్చితంగా ఫలానా అంశాలు కారణమని అప్పుడే చెప్పలేమని సిఎంఐఇ పేర్కొన్నది.నిలిచిపోయిన పధకాల విలువ 10.8లక్షల కోట్ల రూపాయలు. నరేంద్రమోడీ విదేశీ పర్యటనలన్నీ విజయవంతమయ్యాయని అప్పుడు చెప్పారు. వాటి అర్ధమేమిటి ?

     ఐటి రంగంలో పెట్టుబడుల గురించి చంద్రబాబు నాయుడు, ఆయన ప్రచార మంత్రి పల్లె రఘునాధ రెడ్డి, ముఖ్యమంత్రి కుమారుడు లోకేష్‌ తమ పలుకుబడిని వుపయోగించి అనేక ఒప్పందాలు చేసుకున్నట్లు ప్రకటనల మీద ప్రకటనలు చేశారు. 2015-16లో 12-14శాతం అభివృద్ధి వుంటుందని భావిస్తే అది 2017లో 10-12 శాతంగా వుందని అంచనా.’ ప్రభుత్వం చేసిన ప్రకటనలు, మేము చూసిన ధోరణులను బట్టి ఒక వేగంతో దేశీయ విభాగం పెరుగుతుందని అంచనా వేశాము. అయితే వాటిలో ఎక్కువ భాగం ఆచరణలోకి రాలేదు. అవి ఎప్పుడు ఆచరణలోకి వస్తే అప్పుడు మనం పెద్ద ప్రభావాన్ని చూడవచ్చు ‘ అని నాస్కామ్‌ అధ్యక్షుడు చంద్రశేఖర్‌ వ్యాఖ్యానించారు. ప్రధాన మంత్రి విదేశీ పర్యటనల మోజు తగ్గిపోయినట్లుగా కనిపిస్తోంది. ఎందుకంటే విమాన ఖర్చులకు కూడా సరిపడా ప్రయోజనం లేకపోతే జనానికి చెప్పుకొనేదేమీ వుండదు. బహుశా ఈ కారణంగానే ఆయన మంత్రులు కొత్త పల్లవి అందుకున్నారు. తమ ప్రభుత్వ ఖాదీ పధకాల కారణంగా 2016-17లో 70-80లక్షల వుద్యోగాలు లభిస్తాయని చిన్న, సన్న, మధ్యతరగతి పరిశ్రమల మంత్రి గిరిరాజ్‌ సింగ్‌ చెబుతున్నారు. అంటే జనం చౌకగా దొరికే మిల్లు వస్త్రాల బదులు ఖరీదయిన ఖాదీ ధరిస్తారని అర్ధమా ? ఖాదీ వడికేందుకు సోలార్‌ రాట్నాలను ప్రవేశపెడితే ఖర్చు తగ్గుతుందని,లాభాలు వస్తాయని మంత్రిగారు చెబుతున్నారు. ‘ప్రధాని నరేంద్రమోడీ విజ్ఞాపనలో ఏదో మాజిక్‌ వుంది. ఖాదీ పెరుగుదల రేటును చూస్తే గణనీయంగా పెరిగిందని’ ఖాదీగ్రామీణ పరిశ్రమల సంస్ధ సిఇఓ అరుణ్‌ కుమార్‌ చెబుతున్నారు. అది పిట్ట కధలా లేదూ !

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  • విస్మృత ఆదివాసీకి తొలిసారి పట్టంగట్టిన కేరళ కమ్యూనిస్టులు, శబరిమల బంగారం దొంగలు సోనియా గాంధీతో భేటీ !
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  • ఆ గట్టునుంటావా ఈ గట్టుకొస్తావా : నరేంద్రమోడీకి విషమ పరీక్ష పెట్టిన డోనాల్డ్‌ ట్రంప్‌ !
  • జర్మన్‌ హిట్లర్‌ బాటలో శాస్త్రవేత్తలను బయటకు పంపుతున్న ట్రంప్‌ !

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Recent Posts

  • వెనెజులాపై దాడి, మదురో కిడ్నాప్‌ -అమెరికా అసలు లక్ష్యం చైనా !
  • విస్మృత ఆదివాసీకి తొలిసారి పట్టంగట్టిన కేరళ కమ్యూనిస్టులు, శబరిమల బంగారం దొంగలు సోనియా గాంధీతో భేటీ !
  • నైజీరియాపై అమెరికా క్షిపణులు: ” శాంతి ” దూత డోనాల్డ్‌ ట్రంప్‌ చేయించిన తొమ్మిదవ దాడి !
  • ఆ గట్టునుంటావా ఈ గట్టుకొస్తావా : నరేంద్రమోడీకి విషమ పరీక్ష పెట్టిన డోనాల్డ్‌ ట్రంప్‌ !
  • జర్మన్‌ హిట్లర్‌ బాటలో శాస్త్రవేత్తలను బయటకు పంపుతున్న ట్రంప్‌ !

Recent Comments

pscknr's avatarpscknr on కేరళ స్థానిక సంస్థల ఎన్నికల ఫల…
Venugopalrao Nagumothu's avatarVenugopalrao Nagumot… on విత్తనాల ముసాయిదా బిల్లు …
Raj's avatarRaj on న్యూయార్క్‌ మేయర్‌గా సోషలిస్టు…
Aravind's avatarAravind on సిజెఐ బిఆర్‌ గవాయిపై దాడి యత్న…
Arthur K's avatarArthur K on CPI(M) for proportional repres…

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