Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Strategize to make life meaningful

If you believe you are a child or part of divine, then you should aspire to have big dreams and intentions in life and this is where strategy starts, says Dr Kapil Kakar

Life is a gift of God. However, what we make out of our lives depends on how we control and maneuver it. If we are successful, it denotes a sound strategy has been well thought and executed, but if we fail, we must acknowledge that somewhere our strategy went wrong. It becomes imperative that we find, create and work on the right strategy which makes our life meaningful.

Potent intention

If you believe you are a child or part of divine, then you should aspire to have big dreams and intentions in life and this is where strategy starts. If your intention and expectation from life is not big, you are not optimally using the divine gifts which come in the form of myriad resources like mind, body, potential, talent, etc.

Thinking — An intangible action

A lot of people tend to spend more time on action believing if they think too much, they would be able to do very little. Thinking is the foundation for the right action. One needs to spend more time thinking.

Evaluate resources

One must first find out about the available resources — small or insignificant, evaluate their importance and usage before working on any opportunity. Also try to fit all resources in your preparation.

Take minute information seriously

Go into every little detail and collect as much information as you can. Incongruent or incomplete information leads to ill preparedness and dissatisfaction. So, don’t take anything for granted and remember a big problem is unconsciously nurtured and doesn’t happen accidentally. It is fallout of a non serious attitude towards small details.

Share and discuss

Share your thoughts with only those who possess almost same or higher amount of information, otherwise you are speaking to the wrong person and seeking the wrong guidance leading to wrong life preparation and strategy.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Street before Wall street

Street before Wall Street



It’s definitely not business as usual. As shining shoes, selling vegetables and delivering newspapers become par for the course, MBA students are getting their hands dirty. Their classroom’s out in the real world

Sharmila Ganesan-Ram | TIMES NEWS NETWORK

On a rainy day last month, 22-yearold Vishalakshi Bharadwaj put on a freshly ironed blazer and headed for Vashi railway station platform with a laptop in one hand and a shoe brush in the other. Forty other girls and boys squatted on the floor with her, all keeping an eye out for customers wearing dirty leather shoes.
Some commuters did mistake them for ticket-checkers but had they noticed the PowerPoint presentation running on their laptop, they would have realised that the blazer-clad kids weren’t there to check passes but to sell some. The shoe-polish exercise was their way of publicising a charity rock show and raising funds for an orphanage. “Some people gave us Rs 100 while some shooed us away. It was a lesson on how to handle people,” says Bharadwaj.
Today’s B-school students are fast realising that management is not just about wearing a tie and drawing obscene salaries. And learning the art can mean getting your hands dirty.
It’s these kinds of projects that professors like Sridhar Iyer of Father Agnel’s, who is called ‘Zara Hatke’ and ‘Adolf Hitler’ alternately, insist on including in the curriculum. “We have moved from a knowledge economy to a creative one. We don’t want to churn out management technicians but those with a genuine concern for society and country,” he says. Students, he adds, have to be made capable “to face their graveyard which is on the road”.
On one such road in Lucknow, SP Jain student Bikash Agarwal sold carrots and tomatoes and even shooed away the cows that tried to eat them. As part of a competition ‘The Next CEO’, organised by IIM-Lucknow, Agarwal and other contenders had to sell vegetables on a busy Lucknow street and come back with profits. Among the candidates were some who didn’t even know the Hindi names of certain greens.
Agarwal sold his veggies at almost double the cost price and went on to win the competition. “We had to shout and scream to attract attention. The trick was to make a pitch at people who looked well-off,” recalls Agarwal, who managed to emotionally blackmail a smoker into buying vegetables with the money he had kept aside for two cigarettes and a curious journalist into buying a lemon for Rs 5. His
father, however, was not very impressed. “You went all the way to IIM to sell vegetables?” he asked.
Agarwal is used to such comments. Back in Mumbai, when he had to knock on stubborn doors to sell a children’s comic called Dimdima, someone said, “If you had studied and not wasted your childhood, you wouldn’t have had to do this job.” Others were polite enough to slam the door in his face, some watchmen threw him out of the building and finally, there were the odd ones who showed interest. “I now have more respect for salesmen,” Agarwal says.
Earlier this year, Lolita D’souza and her 25 batchmates delivered newspapers to 25 homes in Vashi before dawn. “Some residents refused to take the paper from us as they thought we were trying to break in,” says D’souza, adding that while climbing those zillion stairs, she learnt the essence of ‘time management’.
Professors have their own term for such personality enriching initiatives — ‘Interventions’. In Rustomji business school in Dahisar, principal Hanif Kanjer has made flute and salsa classes a mandatory part of the first year syllabus. “Playing the flute regulates breathing and improves speech, while salsa is necessary for social skills. If you dance well, you are noticed,” says Kanjer. A boy who hesitates to dance with a girl at first is made to dance with two, “to overcome his inhibitions”, he says.
There are also compulsory bootcamps during which students are treated like participants in an adventure reality show. They are made to swing from trees, cook without utensils and handle disaster management situations. “One girl broke down after climbing a tree as she didn’t want to swing. After one and a half hours of coaxing by her teammates, she completed the task,” Kanjer recalls.
Impromptu situations like these don’t just pump students with adrenaline but also equip them with the grit and determination required to complete presentations overnight and deal with extreme situations like zero capital.
At the Innowe lab in Matunga’s Welingkar Institute of Management, professor of business design Kaustubh Dhargalkar, who says he hates academics, recalls a morning not so long ago when teachers frisked every student and took away cash and mobile phones. “The students’ challenge was to go out that day and make money by ethical means,” he says.
The class of 60 came back with a total of about Rs 12,000 and some exemplary stories. “One student helped a tea stall vendor make an extra profit of 50 paise per vada pao. After 12 or 13 sales, he bought a train ticket to Churchgate, took foreigners on a tour around south Mumbai and made $12,” says Dhargalkar. Another worked at a library and yet another student gave a lecture at his alma mater on a subject that he could claim mastery over — ‘How to enter a business school’.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Lead Indicator

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=ET&BaseHref=ETM/2009/10/21&PageLabel=9&EntityId=Ar00901&ViewMode=HTML&GZ=T
1)On the same page:slang
When you’re on the same page as someone, you have an equal level of understanding about a situation. You have similar ideas about what needs to be accomplished.


When working with a group of people, it is important for everyone to be on the same page. Everyone should know what needs to get done and when it needs to get done. If people aren’t on the same page, problems arise.
 
2)Rolodex: Noun

(trademark) a desktop rotary card index with removable cards; usually used for names, addresses, and telephone numbers

eg: "a news reporter has to have a good Rolodex"

3)Beeb


It stands for the BBC
4)diffidence: Noun


Lack of self confidence
 
5)bugbear: Noun


An imaginary monster used to frighten children; An object of dread or apprehension

eg: In his letter, Ramesh emphasizes his concern about India being seen as a bugbear for the developed countries in the climate negotiations.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Success by Michael Korda

http://www.dountoothers.org/sixsimplesteps.html

Just a matter of talking

Just a matter of talking
Vinita thought Resham was proud. Resham thought Vinita was avoiding her. What could be the problem?
Vinita had to push her cycle homE and she was tired. just then an old lady came to help her...





Resham is really proud these days. It’s because she came first in class last term.”
Vinita’s mother was surprised to hear Vinita. Resham is your friend,” said her mother.
“Yes but not anymore. I didn’t like her attitude. Her Grandmother has come and till now she hasn’t introduced me to her.”
“Resham may be preoccupied. Speak to her about it.”
“Why should I? It’s not my problem after all.”
Coincidence?
“If it’s not your problem then why can’t you just forget about it? Why don’t you take the initiative and have a chat with her.”
“That would be eating humble pie!”
“On the other hand, it would mean you are approachable, keen on straightening things up and you don’t take things for granted.”
The next day as Vinita was cycling home from school she had a puncture. She had to push it home. It was very hot and she was almost faint with fatigue. An old lady saw her and bought her tender coconut. After she had drunk the water, Vinita felt much better. Vinita thanked the old lady and thought to herself that the old lady was indeed an angel.
Since they were going in the same direction they walked back together. The old lady stopped in front of an apartment which looked familiar. It was Resham’s apartment!
Just then, Resham came running towards them shouting, “Grandma! Grandma!” Vinita was surprised. Grandma invited her home. Vinita was hesitant, but before she could protest she found herself sitting inside Resham’s house with snacks and juice in front of her.
“How are you, Vinita?” said Resham.
“I am fine.” “Is something wrong? Why have you been avoiding me lately,”
“Well it’s not me. It’s you who has been avoiding me!,” replied Vinita. “Your Grandmother has been here all these days and you didn’t introduce me to her.”
“After my Grandmother came here, she became sick, that’s why I couldn’t introduce you to her. She was admitted in hospital. Later, when I visited you, I found that you had gone on a vacation. And you hadn’t told me about that at all. I couldn’t reach you on your mobile and I had no idea when you would get back. When you returned, you didn’t even call me.”
Vinita thought about what Resham had said and it all made sense. Had she been too hasty jumping to conclusions?
“So is this your friend whom you wanted to introduce me all this while,” asked Grandma. “Resham has told me so much about you!”



Inflation

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Repository/getimage.dll?path=ETM/2009/10/20/9/Img/Pc0090900.jpg

Mining rare earth for a excellent future

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=ET&BaseHref=ETM/2009/10/20&PageLabel=12&EntityId=Ar01200&ViewMode=HTML&GZ=T

Socio Economic Classification

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=ET&BaseHref=ETM/2009/10/20&PageLabel=5&ForceGif=true&EntityId=Ar00500&ViewMode=HTML&GZ=T

Consumer Life

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=ET&BaseHref=ETM/2009/10/20&PageLabel=4&EntityId=Ar00401&ViewMode=HTML&GZ=T

Monday, October 12, 2009

Ignited minds


Synopsis


The book begins with a sad note. On 30 September 2001, Kalam’s helicopter, while on its way from Ranchi, Jharkhand state, India to Bokaro crashed, but all aboard miraculously survived. He was administered that night a tranquilizer, and he recalls having seen a very vivid dream. He writes in the book that he saw himself in a desert “with miles of sand all around,’ and there stood five men, namely, Mahatma Gandhi, Albert Einstein, Emperor Ashoka, Abraham Lincoln and Caliph Omar. Kalam felt dwarfed by their presence, and recounts the words of these great personalities.

The next chapter emphasises the importance of mother, father and elementary school teachers as role models.

The third chapter tells that "Vision ignites the minds", and talks about the modern Indian visionaries like J. R. D. Tata, Vikram Sarabhai, Satish Dhawan and Dr. Verghese Kurien.

The next section of the book deals with the spiritual heritage of the Indian nation and talks about developing a model of development based on India's inherent strengths.

The fifth chapter of the book exhorts the Indians, constituting a nation of one billion people "with multitude faiths and ideologies" to develop a "national vision" and amalgamate into one "national forum."

The next chapter begins with a Thirukkural, which states:

"Wisdom is a weapon to ward off destruction;

It is an inner fortress which enemies cannot destroy".

This chapter reminds the readers that Ancient India was a "knowledge society that contributed a great deal to civilization."

The caption line of the seventh chapter is followed by the following inspiring words of Abraham Lincoln:

"Determine that things can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way."

The eighth chapter exhorts for a change in the mindset and to take pragmatic risks, which shall result into success.

The ninth and the last chapter, with the caption line of "To My Countrymen" begins with few words of the Nobel laureate, Rabindranath Tagore - "let my country awake."

The book ends with a "Song of Youth", with these opening words:

"As a young citizen of India ,
armed with technology and love for my nation,
I realize, a small aim is a crime."

Thursday, October 8, 2009

State awards

IBN7 Diamond States Awards  bestowed an honor to states for the following categories:

Kerala - Best Big state award
Punjab - Best small state award

1IBN7 Diamond States Award – Healthcare
Big State - Kerala
Small State -Goa
2IBN7 Diamond States Award – Education
Big State -Megahalya

Small State -Chattisgarh

3IBN7 Diamond States Award – Basic Infrastructure
Big State - Kerala

Small State  - Delhi

4IBN7 Diamond States Award – Women Empowerment
Big State - Tamil Nadu

Small State -

5IBN7 Diamond States Award – Citizen Security & Justice
Big State - Gujarat      Nagaland

Small State - Goa         UP

6IBN7 Diamond States Award – Water & Sanitation
Big State - Tamil Nadu

Small State - Sikkim

7IBN7 Diamond States Award – Employment
Big State - Chattisgarh

Small State -HP

8IBN7 Diamond States Award – Poverty Reduction
Big State - Punjab

Small State - J&K

9IBN7 Diamond States Award – Environment
Big State - Kerala

Small State - Goa

Nobel awarded Indians

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_laureates_of_India

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

GRE week 2 - day 2

1) abet:- to assist or support in the achievement of a purpose
2) trait - a distinguishing quality (as of a personal character) peculiarity
3) naive - deficient in worldly wisdom or informed judgment; especially :CREDULOUS;showing lack of experience

Monday, October 5, 2009

GRE - Week 2

1)Conspiracy
an evil, unlawful, treacherous, or surreptitious plan formulated in secret by two or more persons; plot.
2)nudge
to push slightly or gently, esp. with the elbow, to get someone's attention, prod someone into action, etc.

3)Transient
adjective . lasting only a short time; existing briefly; temporary: transient authority.
noun: a person or thing that is transient, esp. a temporary guest, boarder, laborer, or the like.

4)foliage
the leaves of a plant, collectively; leafage.


Nose Surgery

Friday, October 2, 2009

GRE - 4

2/10/2009
1) Limousine -









2) Precipice -a very steep or overhanging place;dangerous position;CLIFF








3) Extemporize - IMPROVISE;especially to speak extemporaneously


Connotations-Part 1

Thursday, October 1, 2009

GRE Lesson 3

1/10/2009
1)Homely - Not attractive or good looking; proper suited to home or domestic life;commonly seen
2) Limp (adj) - lacking firm texture,substance or structure
   (verb) to walk as when lame; to progress slowly and with greater difficulty


3) inure - accustom to accept something undesirable


4) disavow - to deny responsibility for :REPUDIATE;reject;disclaim


English Vocabulary -Bull

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Uttar Pradesh

Uttar Pradesh:
It is the land of epics.It is the densely populated state in India and only China,India as a whole ,US,Indonesia has more population than this state.It is the 5th largest state in area.

UP has contributed to largest number of Prime Ministers in Independent India.The eight former Prime Ministers who represented this state in the Parliament are Jawaharlal Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Indira Gandhi, Chaudhary Charan Singh, Rajiv Gandhi, V.P. Singh, Chandrashekhar and A.B. Vajpayee.

Location:It is situated in Northern India.It is important to note that UP is the state in India which shares border with the largest number Indian states. It has 8 states and 1 National Capital Territory (Delhi) as its neighbours. Besides, it has Nepal as its neighbour in the northern side. UP shares the longest border with Madhya Pradesh.The states are: to the north along with the Indian state of Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh to the north-west, Haryana, Delhi and Rajasthan on the west, Madhya Pradesh on the south, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand on the south east and Bihar on the east.
The administrative and legislative capital of Uttar Pradesh is Lucknow and the financial and industrial capital is Kanpur. The state's high court is based at Allahabad. It is home to many historical cities like Varanasi and Agra. Kanpur is its largest city; other big cities are Meerut, Bareilly, Allahabad, Ghaziabad and Noida.

India Map


World Map




Vocabulary

30/09/2009
1)Pertinacious:
stubbornly unyielding or tenacious;obstinate

If you're obstinate, you're just plain stubborn. "Obstinate," "dogged," "stubborn," "pertinacious," and "mulish" all mean that someone is unwilling to change course or give up a belief or plan. "Obstinate" suggests an unreasonable persistence; it's often a negative word. "Dogged," which can be more positive, implies that someone goes after something without ever tiring or quitting, while "pertinacious" suggests a persistence that can be annoying. "Stubborn" indicates a resistance to change, which may or may not be admirable. Someone who displays a really unreasonable degree of stubbornness could accurately be described as "mulish."

2) enumerate:
 to specify one after another ;LIST;name one by one
EX: 1) Get up
       2) Take bath
       3) Prayer
       4) Breakfast

3) illustrate:
   to provide with visual features intended to explain or decorate
   epitomise;



English Vocabulary

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Uttar Pradesh

GRE Vocabulary

29th Sep:
1) heinous:(hye-nous) hatefully or shockingly evil:ABOMINABLE
2) quaff : (kwaf) - to drink(a beverage) deeply
3) acquistion - the act of acquiring
4) abuse - to attack in words; malign ;REVILE

English Vocabulary

Cricket

About the game:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

BRIC SUMMIT

BRIC mean:
An acronym for the economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China combined. The general consensus is that the term was first prominently used in a Goldman Sachs report from 2003, which speculated that by 2050 these four economies would be wealthier than most of the current major economic powers.

The BRIC thesis posits that China and India will become the world's dominant suppliers of manufactured goods and services, respectively, while Brazil and Russia will become similarly dominant as suppliers of raw materials. It's important to note that the Goldman Sachs thesis isn't that these countries are a political alliance (like the European Union) or a formal trading association - but they have the potential to form a powerful economic bloc. BRIC is now also used as a more generic marketing term to refer to these four emerging economies.


Due to lower labor and production costs, many companies also cite BRIC as a source of foreign expansion opportunity.

Brazil, Russia, India and China ended the first BRIC summit at Yekaterinburg in Russia by calling for an increased role in global financial institutions by emerging economies and developing nations. At the conclusion of the first BRIC summit on June16,2009 BRIC countries issued a joint statement calling for increased economic reform. The four nations, representing emerging economic powers, demanded that developing economies have a greater voice and representation in international financial institutions, and their heads and senior leadership should be appointed through an open, transparent and merit-based selection process. BRIC countries said that they also believe there is a strong need for a stable, predictable and more diversified international monetary system, it showed a warning against the global domination of the US dollar as the world’s standard reserve currency.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had voiced similar sentiments before the summit, saying the current reserve policies have not managed to perform their functions. Chief economic aide, Arkady Dvorkovich, suggested that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) should revise the basket of currencies used to value its financial products to include the Russian ruble and Chinese Yuan. At the moment the currencies included are the dollar, euro, yen and sterling.
The range of topics on the agenda and the line-up of presidents attending showed the growing economic and political power of the world's emerging nations, including India and China, and their desire to forge new levers of influence. Host president Dmitry Medvedev of Russia hailed the Urals city of Yekaterinburg as the epicenter of world politics.

BRICs New Affirmation

The so-called BRIC nations of Brazil, Russia, India and China called for reform of international financial institutions, sweeping changes to the United Nations to give a bigger role to Brazil and India and a stable and predictable currency system. Iran's president, re-elected in a disputed vote, fired a salvo at the United States, the leaders of India and Pakistan had their first one-to-one meeting since the Mumbai attacks and the four top emerging market economies held their first summit.

A common thread running through the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit and a separate meeting between Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRIC) was discussion of a new world order less dependent on the United States. President of Russia told that existing reserve currencies, including the U.S. dollar, had not performed their function and said it was time for change and countries should use their national currencies more for trade. The BRIC summit ended with a statement by Medvedev and a communique which demanded more power for developing nations. It did not mention two key Moscow initiatives a smaller role for the U.S. dollar and a supranational reserve currency.

The Kremlin's top economic aide, Arkady Dvorkovich, said the International Monetary Fund (IMF) should expand the basket of its Special Drawing Right (an international reserve asset) to including the Chinese yuan, the Russian rouble and gold. The dollar fell 0.9 percent against a basket of major currencies on world markets after Medvedev's comments. Since the four BRIC nations represent around 40 percent of the world's population and 15 percent of its GDP. Russia and China lead the SCO, a security and economic co-operation forum which also includes four Central Asian states, plus Iran, Mongolia, India and Pakistan as observers. It can be say that such a type of coordination will allow developing nations to better explain their positions to each other and work out a novel path to resolving international financial problems and the reform of international financial relations.

Underlining its growing economic influence abroad, Chinese President Hu Jintao offered Central Asian states $10 billion of credit support to help counter the global economic slump, though he did not mention the proposals for diluting dollar dominance. In another ignore to the West, the SCO leaders welcomed Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, making his first foreign trip to attend the summit since his disputed re-election. Ahmadinejad arrived a day late in Yekaterinburg after mass protests against his disputed victory in Tehran but the SCO presidents had congratulated Ahmadinejad on his victory.

On the sidelines, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met Pakistani leader Asif Ali Zardari for the first time since the Mumbai attacks and asked him to ensure that Islamist militants could not operate from Pakistani territory. His tough words offered little hope for a breakthrough in relations between the two nuclear-armed Asian powers.

Campaigning for Economic Modification

Those divisive issues are mainly political in nature which is why most observers correctly predicted that the BRIC summit would focus predominantly on economic issues. Combined, the BRIC countries currently have a 15-percent share of the world economy and a 42-percent share of global currency reserves. Their increased economic power was underscored when Brazil and Russia joined China in announcing they would shift some $70 billion (50 billion euros) of reserves into multicurrency bonds issued by the International Monetary Fund. The move was interpreted by some as an attempt to topple the dollar in part because the Russian president said at the time that his proposal to create a new world currency could be discussed at the summit.

But fiscal experts said that BRIC will tread carefully where the dollar is concerned, as triggering a dollar crisis would be akin to shooting themselves in the foot. The BRIC’s are putting the US on notice that there has to be a cutback on spending and that they need to get their house in order any attack on the dollar will hurt them. But they want to make sure this kind of mess doesn't happen again. Clearly though, BRIC is using its new influence to put pressure on the IMF to reshape its voting structure to better reflect the shift in economic power. Brazil, for example, is the world's 10th largest economy, but has just 1.38 percent of the IMF board's votes, compared to 2.09 percent for Belgium, an economy one-third the size.


Joint Statement of the BRIC Countries’ Leaders

Leaders of the Federative Republic of Brazil, the Russian Federation, the Republic of India and the People’s Republic of China, have discussed the current situation in global economy and other pressing issues of global development, and also prospects for further strengthening collaboration within the BRIC.

BRIC have arrived at the following conclusions:

» BRIC stressed the central role played by the G20 Summits in dealing with the financial crisis. They have fostered cooperation, policy coordination and political dialogue regarding international economic and financial matters.

» BRIC called upon all states and relevant international bodies to act vigorously to implement the decisions adopted at the G20 Summit in London on April 2, 2009. BRIC shall cooperate closely among them and with other partners to ensure further progress of collective action at the next G20 Summit to be held in Pittsburgh in September 2009. BRIC countries are committed to advance the reform of international financial institutions, so as to reflect changes in the global economy. The emerging and developing economies must have greater voice and representation in international financial institutions, whose heads and executives should be appointed through an open, transparent, and merit-based selection process. BRIC also believe that there is a strong need for a stable, predictable and more diversified international monetary system.

» BRIC countries are convinced that a reformed financial and economic architecture should be based, inter alia, on the following principles:

• Democratic and transparent decision-making and implementation process at the international financial organisations;

• Solid legal basis;

• Compatibility of activities of effective national regulatory institutions and international standard-setting bodies;

• Strengthening of risk management and supervisory practices.


» BRIC countries recognise the important role played by international trade and foreign direct investments in the world economic recovery. BRIC countries call upon all parties to work together to improve the international trade and investment environment. They urge the international community to keep the multilateral trading system stable, curb trade protectionism, and push for comprehensive and balanced results of the WTO’s Doha Development Agenda.


» The poorest countries have been hit hardest by the financial crisis. The international community needs to step up efforts to provide liquid financial resources for these countries. The international community should also strive to minimise the impact of the crisis on development and ensure the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. Developed countries should fulfil their commitment of 0.7% of Gross National Income for the Official Development Assistance and make further efforts in increasing assistance, debt relief, market access and technology transfer for developing countries.

» The implementation of the concept of sustainable development, comprising, inter alia, the Rio Declaration, Agenda for the 21st Century and multilateral environmental agreements, should be a major vector in the change of paradigm of economic development.

» BRIC countries stand for strengthening coordination and cooperation among states in the energy field, including amongst energy producers and consumers and transit states, in an effort to decrease uncertainty and ensure stability and sustainability. They support diversification of energy resources and supply, including renewable energy, security of energy transit routes and creation of new energy investments and infrastructure.

» BRIC countries support international cooperation in the field of energy efficiency. They stand ready for a constructive dialogue on how to deal with climate change based on the principle of common but differentiated responsibility, given the need to combine measures to protect the climate with steps to fulfill our socio-economic development tasks.

» BRIC countries reaffirmed to enhance cooperation among our countries in socially vital areas and to strengthen the efforts for the provision of international humanitarian assistance and for the reduction of natural disaster risks. They take note of the statement on global food security issued today as a major contribution of the BRIC countries to the multilateral efforts to set up the sustainable conditions for this goal.

» BRIC countries reaffirmed to advance cooperation among our countries in science and education with the aim, inter alia, to engage in fundamental research and development of advanced technologies.

» BRIC countries underlined their support for a more democratic and just multi-polar world order based on the rule of international law, equality, mutual respect, cooperation, coordinated action and collective decision-making of all states. BRIC countries reiterate their support for political and diplomatic efforts to peacefully resolve disputes in international relations.

» BRIC countries strongly condemn terrorism in all its forms and manifestations and reiterate that there can be no justification for any act of terrorism anywhere or for whatever reasons. They note that the draft Comprehensive Convention against International Terrorism is currently under the consideration of the UN General Assembly and call for its urgent adoption.

» BRIC countries expressed their strong commitment to multilateral diplomacy with the United Nations playing the central role in dealing with global challenges and threats. In this respect, They reaffirmed the need for a comprehensive reform of the UN with a view to making it more efficient so that it can deal with today’s global challenges more effectively. They reiterated the importance that attach to the status of India and Brazil in international affairs, and understand and support their aspirations to play a greater role in the United Nations.

» BRIC countries have agreed upon steps to promote dialogue and cooperation among our countries in an incremental, proactive, pragmatic, open and transparent way. The dialogue and cooperation of the BRIC countries is conducive not only to serving common interests of emerging market economies and developing countries, but also to building a harmonious world of lasting peace and common prosperity.

» Russia, India and China welcomed the invitation of Brazil to the next BRIC summit where it will host in 2010.

Cooperation Within BRIC

BRIC is a loose group of countries including Brazil, Russia, India and China, the largest economic growth and political influence centres among emerging economies. These countries have a substantial integration potential in their respective regions. The global problems of international terrorism and multinational crime, environmental degradation and climate change, plus food and energy security cannot be effectively solved without the involvement of the BRIC countries. BRIC partnership is becoming increasingly important amid the global economic and financial downturn, when the four countries should coordinate their efforts with the international community to weather the crisis on global financial markets and reform the world financial system.

Political dialogue within the BRIC format began in New York in September 2006, when their foreign ministers conferred during the 61st UN General Assembly. Since then, the BRIC foreign ministers have met four times, including at a full-scale meeting in Yekaterinburg on May 16, 2008. The joint statement adopted as a result of the latter meeting formulated common approaches to crucial issues on the international agenda.

Ties between the BRIC foreign ministers were completed by the meetings between their finance ministers in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on November 7, 2008 and in London on March 13, 2009. The finance ministers adopted joint statements on their meetings, which reflected common views of global economic problems, including the reasons for and ways to weather the global financial crisis.

At the initiative of Russia, the four leaders had a short meeting on July 9, 2008, during the G8 summit in Japan, to agree on drafting a full-scale BRIC summit. Official contacts in the BRIC format have been buttressed by interaction between the respective regional authorities and public organisations.

Russia would like the cooperation between the BRIC countries to become a major factor of multilateral diplomacy and to make a substantial contribution to promoting the nascent multipolarity and development of collective leadership by the world’s leading countries. By some predictions, the four nations, Brazil, Russia, India and China, a group referred to as the BRIC group, will surpass the current leading economies by the middle of this century, a tectonic shift that by this reckoning will eventually nudge the United States and Western Europe away from the center of world productivity and power.

Russia’s president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, said the main point of the meeting was to show that the BRIC should create conditions for a more just world order. The four countries produce about 15 percent of the world’s gross domestic product and hold about 40 percent of the gold and hard currency reserves, but they are not a unified bloc and do not do enough business among themselves to justify a trade alliance. Russia and Brazil export natural resources, China exports manufactured goods and India bases its growth primarily on domestic demand. As such, India is not as concerned with the status of the dollar and is by no means as intent on scoring ideological points against the United States as is Russia.

The acronym BRIC was coined by a Goldman Sachs economist in 2001 to describe the four countries that were expected to surpass today’s largest economies by 2050, owing to their faster growth rate. A communiqué issued after the meeting highlighted the common goals of a greater voice in international financial institutions and a more diversified global monetary system. They agreed to meet again in 2010, in Brazil. The gathering was the second of back-to-back summit meetings sponsored by Russia in this city in the Ural Mountains on the divide between Europe and Asia.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a regional security alliance intended loosely as a counterweight to NATO, met in an expanded format with many Eurasian nations holding observer status. It even included a brief appearance by the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose disputed re-election last week has touched off street demonstrations in Tehran. In a sign of regional economic integration, China’s president, Hu Jintao, pledged $10 billion in aid to Central Asian nations in the group, which consists of China, Russia and four former Soviet states: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Mr. Hu and Mr. Medvedev then met separately with India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, and the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Mr. Medvedev encouraged China, the world’s largest holder of dollar reserves, and other nations to put their money in some other currency or financial mechanism. He also urged members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to use their national currencies in conducting bilateral trade.

There can be no successful currency system, and particularly a global system, if the financial instruments that are used are denominated in only one currency, Mr. Medvedev said. A top economic policy aide to Mr. Medvedev, Arkady Dvorkovich, said Russia would like to diversify its currency reserves away from dollars by buying bonds from Brazil, China and India, but only if they bought Russian rubles as a reserve. The dollar fell slightly against the euro and other currencies on Tuesday, though some traders quoted by Bloomberg News cited a more workaday cause: good results on new American housing starts were encouraging investors to move out of Treasury bonds and into equities.

The Path To 2050

The BRIC dissertation (defended in the paper Dreaming with BRICs: The Path to 2050) recognizes that Brazil, Russia, India and China have changed their political systems to embrace global capitalism. Goldman Sachs predicts China and India, respectively, to be the dominant global suppliers of manufactured goods and services while Brazil and Russia would become similarly dominant as suppliers of raw materials. Cooperation is thus hypothesized to be a logical next step among the BRICs because Brazil and Russia together form the logical commodity suppliers to India and China. Thus, the BRICs have the potential to form a powerful economic bloc to the exclusion of the modern-day states currently of "Group of Eight" status.

Brazil is dominant in soy and iron ore while Russia has enormous supplies of oil and natural gas. Goldman Sachs' thesis thus documents how commodities, work, technology, and companies have diffused outward from the United States across the world. Following the end of the Cold War or even before, the governments comprising BRIC all initiated economic or political reforms to allow their countries to enter the world economy. In order to compete, these countries have simultaneously stressed education, foreign investment, domestic consumption, and domestic entrepreneurship.

According to the study, India has the potential to grow the fastest among the four BRIC countries over the next 30 to 50 years. A major reason for this is that the decline in working age population will happen later for India and Brazil than for Russia and China.

Analysis

The Economist published an annual table of social and economic national statistics in its Pocket World in Figures. Extrapolating the global rankings from their 2008 Edition for the BRIC countries and economies in relation to various categories provides an interesting touchstone in relation to the economic underpinnings of the BRIC thesis. It also illustrates how, despite their divergent economic bases, the economic indicators are remarkably similar in global rankings between the different economies. It also suggests that whilst economic arguments can be made for linking Mexico into the BRIC thesis, the case for including South Africa looks considerably weaker.

A Goldman Sachs paper published later in December 2005 explained why Mexico wasn't included in the original BRICs. According to the paper, among the other countries they looked at, only Mexico and perhaps Korea have the potential to rival the BRICs, but they are economies that they decided to exclude initially because they looked at them as already more developed. According to that paper, Mexico becomes the fifth-largest economy by 2050, ahead of Russia.

A criticism is that the BRIC projections are based on the assumptions that resources are limitless and endlessly available when needed. In reality, many important resources currently necessary to sustain economic growth, such as oil, natural gas, coal, other fossil fuels, and uranium might soon experience a peak in production before enough renewable energy can be developed and commercialized, which might result in slower economic growth than anticipated, thus throwing off the projections and their dates.

The economic emergence of the BRICs will have unpredictable consequences for the global environment. Indeed, proponents of a set carrying capacity for the Earth may argue that, given current technology, there is a finite limit to how much the BRICs can develop before exceeding the ability of the global economy to supply.

Academics and experts have suggested that China is in a league of its own compared to the other BRIC countries. BRIC are the one with the big reserves. They are the biggest potential market. They are the U.S. partner in the G2 (imagine the coverage a G2 meeting gets vs. a G8 meeting) and the E2 (no climate deal without them) and so on. Deutsche Bank Research said in a report that economically, financially and politically, China overshadows and will continue to overshadow the other BRICs. It added that China's economy is larger than that of the three other BRIC economies (Brazil, Russia and India) combined. Moreover, China's exports and its official forex reserve holdings are more than twice as large as those of the other BRICs combined.

Another criticism is the understatement of GDP growth in China over the next 45 years; which predicts growth falling far below normal development. This contradicts the rapid economic growth that has already taken place in the country and the experience of countries like South Korea catching up with western GDP per capita, which China has been growing faster than in a similar period of development. There are many uncertainties and assumptions in the BRIC thesis that could mean that any or all of these four countries will not live up to their promise. The preeminence of China and India as major manufacturing countries with unrealised potential has been widely recognised, but some commentators state that China's and Russia's disregard for human rights and democracy could be a problem in the future, as is the possibility of conflict over Taiwan in the case of China.

Likewise, the population of Russia is steadily declining and aging, and Brazil's and China's populations will begin to decline in several decades, and with their demographic windows closing in several decades as well. This may have implications for those countries' future, for there might be a decrease in the overall labor force and a negative change in the proportion of workers to retirees.

Brazil's economic potential has been anticipated for decades, but it had until recently consistently failed to achieve investor expectations. Only in recent years has the country established a framework of political, economic, and social policies that allowed it to resume consistent growth. The result has been solid and paced economic development that rival its early 70's miracle years, as reflected in its expanding capital markets, lowest unemployment rates in decades, and consistent international trade surpluses - that led to the accumulation of reserves and liquidation of foreign debt (earning the country a coveted investment grade by the S&P and Fitch Ratings in 2008). How long such positive factors will stay in place remains to be seen.

Finally, India's relations with one of its neighbors, Pakistan, have always been frosty. In 1998, there was a nuclear standoff between Pakistan and India. Border conflicts with Pakistan, mostly over the longheld dispute over Kashmir, has further aggravated any economic ties. The BRIC countries have enormous populations of extremely impoverished people. This impedes progress by limiting government finances, increasing social unrest, and limiting potential domestic economic demand. Factors such as international conflict, civil unrest, unwise political policy, outbreaks of disease and terrorism are all factors that are difficult to predict and that could have an effect on the destiny of any country.

Other critics suggest that BRIC is nothing more than a neat acronym for the four largest emerging market economies, but in economic and political terms nothing else (apart from the fact that they are all big emerging markets) links the four. Two are manufacturing based economies and big importers (China and India), but two are huge exporters of natural resources (Brazil and Russia). Two have growing populations (Brazil and India), and two have shrinking populations (China and Russia). The Economist, in its special report on Brazil, expressed the following view: In some ways Brazil is the steadiest of the BRICs. Unlike China and Russia it is a full-blooded democracy; unlike India it has no serious disputes with its neighbors. It is the only BRIC without a nuclear bomb. The Heritage Foundation's Economic Freedom Index, which measures factors such as protection of property rights and free trade ranks Brazil (moderately free) above the other BRICs (mostly unfree).

In a not-so-subtle dig critical of the term as nothing more than a shorthand for emerging markets generally, critics have suggested a correlating term, CEMENT (Countries in Emerging Markets Excluded by New Terminology). Whilst they accept there has been spectacular growth of the BRIC economies, these gains have largely been the result of the strength of emerging markets generally, and that strength comes through having BRICs and CEMENT.

Source:R.K.Pandey
go to the dogs:idiom
become ruined;to become worse in quality or character

The Green Mile:

kerfuffle:Noun
disruption,disturbance

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Mendacity:The tendency to be untruthful
Ex:The main problem with this approach is mendacity.It is simply not true that all countries of the world solemnly agreed on a coordinated stimulus.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

You can become the person you want to be;Failure doesn't mean

Better to do something imperfectly than to do nothing flawlessly.

1.Never reject a possibility because you see something wrong with it!
2.Never reject a possibility because you won’t get the credit!
3.Never reject an idea because it’s impossible!
4.Never reject a possibility because your mind is already made up!
5.Never reject an idea because it’s illegal!
6.Never reject and idea because you don’t have the money, manpower, muscle, or months to achieve it!
7.Never reject an idea because it will create conflict!
8.Never reject an idea because it’s not your way of doing things!
9.Never reject an idea because it might fail!
10.Never reject and idea because it’s sure to succeed!

Take charge take control

               to
      outside forces
      faces
      farces(masks)
      fences
      frustrations
      fantasies
      fears
      fatigue
      faults
      facts
      frenzies
      fates
      forecasts
      foes
      friends
      fracturing experiences of life
      flattening out experiences of life
Do surrender leadership to FAITH
   

Insulate yourself from the following phrases

                            Take care             No way
         Take it easy          TGIF        
                    I have got to see it before I believe it
                 Not too bad   I've heard that before     
            NEVER CAN'T NONE
             It's terminal

Twelve principles to manage problems positively

                        Don'ts
DO'S
    

Language lessons

irascible:(adj)quickly aroused to anger;cranky
ex:With the probable exception of cricket, team sports can often tend to the irascible.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

7 habits of highly effective people in workplace

Book 1

Put your problem from Proper perspective

Never let a problem to be a excuse...
6 Principles:
1)Every living human being has problems.



2)Every problem has a limited life span.
Every mountain has a peak. Every valley has its low point. Life has its ups and downs, its peaks and its valleys. No one is up all the time, nor are the down all the time. Problems do end. They do go away. They are all resolved in time




No problem is permanent. Your problem will not live forever, but you will!
Winter always thaws into springtime. Your storm will pass. Your winter will thaw. Your problem will be resolved.




3) Every problem holds positive possibilities.
There are two sides to every coin. What may be a problem to someone can be a profitable business for others.

4)Every problem will change you.

I’ll always be grateful that I was fired, for it made me angry enough at myself to get up and get going.



5) You can choose what your problem will do to you.
You may not be able to control the times, but you can compose your response. You can turn your pain into profanity—or into poetry. The choice is up to you. You may not have chosen your tough time, but you can choose how you will react to it.


6)There is a positive and negative reaction to every problem.

Follow this you will never gets disappointed with problems you face..































































































Posibility Thinking

Possibility Thinking can show how you can make the most of the ideas that God will give you.
If it’s going to be, it’s up to me!It’s impossible to fail totally if you dare to try.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Book 3


Tough times never last,but tough people do

Book 2

This is one of the book I would like not hurry myself in completing it. I will read one chapter per week.Teach it for two people and learn something from it.
Lets see how it goes on...

Friday, August 21, 2009

http://clockworkgoldfish.com/figureground/list.php

Book 1

This is the first book I read.
It is a must read for everyone.
I learnt a lot reading this book and corrected myself. I learned to focus on truly important things, not just urgent things. To listen-really listen-to other people for the first time. To think “win-win.” To get off the road, which was killing me, and find a real mission and purpose in my professional life.
Any one who would like to be a member of Stephen R Covey community visit https://www.stephencovey.com/
I know how it impacted me read and know how it impacts your life..