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These stores are operated by Homeplus a Korean retailer. According to Wikipedia, Home plus is jointly owned by Samsung and Tesco (a British company) with 113 branches throughout South Korea.

Will these be successful in India?

A top comment on the Youtube page of the video may indicate what may happen in India – 

Idea: instead of wasting time scanning the products, visit the online shop of a supermarket website while you’re on the train. It’s better than a whole crowd standing in front of those walls, punching??? with their elbows just to take pics…

A must read article. Reminded me how the food crisis debate ended up in lobbying for FDI in retail sector. Read to know how govt is failing in the basic job – judicial allocation of resources. 

Some excerpts – 

In recent years, the financial markets have discovered the huge opportunities presented by agricultural commodities. The consequences are devastating, as speculators drive up food prices and plunge millions of people into poverty. But investors care little about the effects of their deals in the real world.

The problem is particularly glaring in Ethiopia, a country whose name is associated with starvation for many people. Even though 5.7 million Ethiopians are dependent on international food aid, the government sells or leases large tracts of fertile land to foreign investors. They, in turn, export most of the food they produce to other countries. Since 2007, the Ethiopian government has approved 815 foreign-funded agricultural projects. Saudi firms, multinational agricultural companies and British pension funds act as investors. Some 3.6 million hectares of land are up for grabs, much of it in the Gambela region, the proposed site of a national park. Now virgin forest is being cleared to produce food for other countries. Fifty kilometers (31 miles) outside the capital Addis Ababa, Jittu Horticulture, a subsidiary of a Spanish agricultural group, produces 180,000 kilograms (396,000 pounds) of vegetables a week. The produce is exported to the Middle East, supplying multinational oil companies and five-star hotels in Dubai, Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. “We bring foreign currency into the country, enabling the government to buy wheat for the hungry,” Dutch manager Jans Brins told the Berlin daily newspaper Tagesspiegel. “It’s the government’s responsibility to feed people who are unable to buy anything for themselves.”

According to the UN assessment, what is needed is a reorientation toward a system of agriculture driven by small farmers who grow their crops at the local level, using both sustainable and environmentally compatible methods. The authors argue that through investment, these farmers must be given access to seeds, infrastructure, knowledge and markets — and thus the opportunity to feed themselves and others. In their view, this is the only way to preserve the natural basis of feeding human beings and fight world hunger.

The original article – Speculating with Lives: How Global Investors Make Money Out of Hunger

Some links which are in tune with what’s on my mind…

1. India’s Costly Culture of Corruption [Steven Pearlstein in Washington Post]

“These are all reminders that, for all its progress in recent years, India’s economy remains very much an insider’s game. A recent study by two American business school professors confirmed that much of the formal economy continues to be run by a couple dozen family-controlled groups that seem to be in just about every major industry — manufacturing, retail, energy, infrastructure, shipping, construction and telecom.”

2. India Inc is not a small crony club [Swaminathan A Aiyer in Times of India]

This is a serious and common criticism, but is mostly wrong. Consider the sensex between 1990 (just before economic liberalization) and today. The sensex comprises the 30 top stock market companies, and the Bombay Stock Exchange keeps changing companies in the list as old giants decline and new ones emerge. If indeed India was dominated by a few oligarchs, the sensex would contain much the same companies today as it did 20 years ago.

3. New India story is about flight of capital [Swapan Dasgupta in Times of India]

From sweetheart deals in telecom and offshore exploration to the ouster of reluctant farmers from their lands, corporate India is being painted the root of all evil. It has become the new juju man—the puppeteer controlling a range of subordinate players ranging from bent bureaucrats to pliant politicians.

The first story above tells what is on mind of everybody in India. Second is a repudiation of the first argument – though a flawed one in my view. The third one, like the second tries to defend big coroporates in India from the recent public outcry – again a meek attempt.

The truth is that India has become a corrupt society. Everyboy knows this. The rich and powerful benefit from it. Everybody else suffers – the biggest loss being the that of opportunity.

A few days ago, the idols of Shri Ram, Lakshman, Sita and other deities were finally installed in the newly constructed temple in the housing society where I live in Pune. Some snaps –

Imag0076Imag0081Imag0069Imag0084

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Taken with picplz.

And God said, “Trust not the tinyurl, for it is subtle and quick to abuse your trust.” 
And it came to pass, that Robert did click the tinyurl and was assaulted from behind by gay pr0n popups. 
And God said, “wtf? I told you…”
-The Book of Stein 

Screenshot_1

Carl Jung – the famous psychologist said –

“If people can be educated to see the lowly side of their own natures, it may be hoped that they will also learn to understand and to love their fellow men better. A little less hypocrisy and a little more tolerance toward oneself can only have good results in respect for our neighbors, for we are all too prone to transfer to our fellows the injustice and violence we inflict upon our own natures.”

I found this quote very apt about the way we deal with the not-so-bright sides of hostorical figures and leaders. Case in point is the intolerent and hasty reactions towards ‘failed-to-understand-the-cultural-tones’ claims about homoerotic relationship of Mahatma Gandhi.

He is a great inspite of such true-false discoveries. Isn’t it?

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Ganesh Kulkarni g.n.kulkarni@gmail.com

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May 2024
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