- Barbara Crossette on the country that is the biggest pain in Asia.
- India is mired in a difficult process of learning how to achieve a well functioning liberal democracy. Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Amol Sharma and Jessica E. Vascellaro look at the problems with freedom of speech in India. And, writing in the Financial Times, John Elliott on India's silliness in giving out visas.
- New years day reading: the trio of C. Raja Mohan, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Bibek Debroy in the Indian Express;
Sunil Jain in Business Standard;
Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar in the Economic Times. - Jayanth Varma in Financial Express on India's exposure to capital flows.
- P. Vaidyanathan Iyer in the Indian Express on what to do with the Planning Commission.
- Dhiraj Nayyar in Indian Express on central bankers.
- On railway reforms: Dhiraj Nayyar in the Financial Express and Sarabjit Arjan Singh in the Indian Express.
- Ashok Desai in the Telegraph on India's place in the Indian ocean, and William H. Avery in Financial Express on what India should be doing in the next decade.
- Sharon LaFraniere in the New York Times, on Chinese scientists returning to China.
- Ravi Kanbur and Eswar Prasad on the monetary policy framework for emerging economies.
- Richard Martin in Wired magazine on thorium-fired nuclear plants. Also see the Energy from Thorium blog.
- Tarun Ramadorai in Financial Express on Dubai.
- John Lee on the generational change in China's leadership and on India.
- Martin Feldstein suggests you should not be investing in gold.
- Mark DeWeaver on the strange place called China, and Carol Mann on the strange place called Afghanistan.
- On the independence of American universities. Also see here. Could the International University of the People be useful for a few million people in India?
- Robert Shiller in the New York Times on the usefulness of local currency, GDP-linked securities issued by governments.
- DARPA is a model for how to put public money into research. In the New York Times, William Saletan reviews a new book on DARPA by Michael Belfiore.
- The rules of the game in hijacking have changed.
Friday, January 08, 2010
Interesting readings
7 comments:
Please note: Comments are moderated. Only civilised conversation is permitted on this blog. Criticism is perfectly okay; uncivilised language is not. We delete any comment which is spam, has personal attacks against anyone, or uses foul language. We delete any comment which does not contribute to the intellectual discussion about the blog article in question.
LaTeX mathematics works. This means that if you want to say $10 you have to say \$10.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteNitin Pai responds:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/01/07/why_india_is_no_villain
Nitin Pai's response is a good one.
ReplyDeleteAjay, what do you mean by "Interesting readings"? You are clearly filtering "good readings". Does this mean you agree with most of what's said?
Why are you giving airtime to people so obviously doing a hatchet job such as Ms. Crossette? Do you share her beliefs?
Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteSometimes the things that our worst critics say contain insights into what is wrong with us and point the way to what we should be doing different.
We only make progress through a process of brutal criticism.
बढ़िया लगा यहां आकर। एक बार शब्दों का सफर पर भी आकर देखें।
ReplyDeletewww.shabdavali.blogspot.com
When I saw the positioning of Barabara Crossette’s article I actually thought ‘how appropriate’! A harsh article on us at the top of the page - what an appropriate way to start the New Year. You know the thing of keeping your friends’ close and enemies (critics) closer.
ReplyDeleteWe were in a rut for 40 years. Doing the wrong thing right. I often feel we were in a sense the ‘North Korea’ (isolationist aspects) of Asia – in a somewhat warmer, fuzzier economic sense. These forty years of isolation, combined with our own perceived sense of importance has resulted in a sense of hurt. We find it very difficult to accept criticism and at the same time are prone to tom-tom our smallest achievements.
I think this leads to the “certain style of Indian diplomacy that alienates debating partners, allies, and opponents."
As our old man was fond of quoting ‘we have miles to go before we sleep’. So lets keep our head to the grindstone, learn what we can from our critics and yes, definitely analyse the data.
Ajay,
ReplyDeleteWhats your view on China overcapacity vs its consumption. you mentioned long time back about banking system problems in china. Do you believe China is smart enough to avert any crisis or something else.
gaurav.