Showing posts with label Lok Sabha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lok Sabha. Show all posts

Sunday, May 18, 2014

IE: Infrastructure + Entrepreneurship

English: Map of Bihar
English: Map of Bihar (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Roads, Electricity, Broadband

Infrastructure is important, but it is not enough. And health and education are still infrastructure.

Roads are important. But don't forget electricity. And don't stop at electricity. Universal broadband allows you to complete globally.

But most important is to serve the entrepreneurs, big and small. Most jobs are created by small businesses. And the state has to go out of its way to serve the small business owners.

Nitish has done well by roads and bridges. He has even done well with schools and hospitals. But there needs to be a bigger emphasis on teachers. One sore eye on his record has been temporary teachers protesting at his public rallies. Those teachers have a point. Bihar needs more teachers, not just more roads and bridges.

Bihar needs more teachers and health care workers. Not only that, it needs to train more of both so as to be able to export them to other states and other countries.

But ultimately it is about creating jobs. And it is not for the state to create jobs. It is for entrepreneurs to do that. And there the key point is making available credit.
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Yes, Mr. Paswan, October, But Next October

English: Flag of Janata Dal (United) of India
English: Flag of Janata Dal (United) of India (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Ram Vilas Paswan has been saying Bihar will see elections by October. He is right, but he might be off the mark by about a year. Bihar will see state elections by October 2015. And I expect Nitish to come back with 150 seats in the state assembly.

Nitish should allow Modi about a year in Delhi. That will be good timing.
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Saturday, March 29, 2014

Nitish Modi Holding Hands



The man who gave Bihar a new dawn
It is difficult to accept two instances from decisive moments in Kumar’s career that are narrated in the book, as non-partisan observations and one is more inclined to view them as sympathetic accounts. Unfortunately, both also display Kumar as a poor judge of circumstances and as a leader with little political foresight, someone with little ability to anticipate moves of adversaries. In the first instance, the writer narrates how Kumar got “trapped” by Bahubalis — or elected warlords, into getting photographed with them in 2000 when he made the failed bid to become chief minister. The second instance is the famous hand grab with Narendra Modi during the 2009 Lok Sabha campaign. On both occasions, Kumar is presented as a victim of conspiracy. Such depiction is kind-hearted at one level, but on the other hand if this is actually a true account then one must say that the Bihar chief minister has been extremely fortunate to reach the position he is in today because one cannot be so guileless and yet acquire political power in the treacherous world of power politics.
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