Cafeblogging

November 4, 2007

BESCOM is doing some sort of maintenance, and so there isn’t any power at my place until nine or ten o’ clock. Since I have to get a lot of questions for next month’s KQA Ranking open ready, I’ve brought my laptop and datacard to the CMH Road Cafe Coffee Day, and I’m blogging from a cafe for the first time in my life.

Much as I love my Dell laptop, I have to admit that in situations like this, you really wish you had a MacBook. Sitting in a cafe and blogging is pseud, but doing it from a MacBook is the sort of overwhelming pseud-put that is very hard to achieve.

Now, back to making questions.


2.3.1

November 3, 2007

In the process of installing WordPress 2.3.1, I inadvertently deleted my theme. While this has the beneficial effect of making the website less orange, it also has knocked out my three column, multi-widget layout. This will be restored in a less orange form shortly. In the meantime, we apologise for all the inconvenience.


Congratulations, Amit

October 25, 2007

Amit Varma has won the Bastiat prize.

Joyous as this is, I can’t help but wonder if and when someone will come up with a Miss World-style conspiracy theory that an Indian has won only to promote a neoliberal agenda in India.

(The original conspiracy theory was that Indian beauty queens were winning Miss World and Miss Universe titles only because cosmetics companies were trying to push sales in the Indian market. If there’s a country which liberalised cosmetics imports and retail at the same time as India, but didn’t win any beauty pageants, this could actually be tested.)


Bringing Back the Memories

October 10, 2007

I’ve started importing the posts from my old content management system (which were lying around in a database backup) into WordPress. As of now, they don’t seem to be showing up in feedreaders, so you’ll just have to visit the archives. As and when I import a particularly good one, I’ll link it.

Since this is a manual process, importing the entire 2003-2005 archives will take some time. On the other hand, this will make up for the lack of new posts.

Since comments will have to be imported manually too, those will have to wait for later. I may or may not ever import them.

Meanwhile, enjoy maadi.


On Commentary

October 10, 2007

I’m busy these days making November’s Open Quiz, writing an article for Pragati, house-hunting, putting scissors, and yes, working. So I don’t have the time to write serious, funda-based posts. What you get instead is me mocking young Shivam Vij.

Young Shivam Vij has started a series of posts called ‘Self Fashioning‘ where he copy-pastes what people have written about themselves without offering any commentary.

Given that when he does comment, he says things like:

To speak what few dare to, to continuously be the madman in the accidents deaths of anarchists – that’s why I so religiously follow Arundhati Roy’s polemics.

the lack of commentary is probably for the best.

And he follows her polemics religiously? But wait! Wasn’t he an atheist? Oh, I get it now. It’s a metaphor only when he uses it.


Agriculture, Lending, and the Middle Class

October 1, 2007

Does everybody here remember Ravikiran’s Dear Middle Class of India post? It abused the Middle Class of India for causing the agricultural crisis by not agitating against the law that prevents farmers from selling their land.

In the comments, it provoked howls of outrage from the Middle Class of India, who angrily said that they couldn’t be held responsible for sins of omission, or for not agitating against a law that they didn’t even know about in the first place.

I was reminded of that post when I saw this: AID India’s call for candlelight vigils across the world to ‘support Indian farmers’ tomorrow. Oh, and this associated page of voices of support, where not a single middle class Indian has proposed a solution that involves letting farmers sell their land (assuming that they have proposed solutions instead of mouthing platitudes about support).

I am tempted to act snarky and say ‘See! See! The middle class is every bit as idiotic as the cartel’s smartest member said it was.’. And some of the comments there are honestly idiotic. They want to improve the lot of the Indian farmer by consuming local food. In America. Someone has brightly proposed inflation linked subsidies. Others have called for abolition of zamindari (which happened fifty years ago), and abused taxes (agricultural income is not taxed).

However, I have been recently called upon to be less politically incorrect. While this will be a source of disappointment to my adoring public, especially Mohan, I am making the effort. And so, instead of being snarky, I will give well reasoned arguments of why allowing farmers to sell their land is a better solution than anything else proposed.

Let’s begin.

*

All solutions other than freeing up the market for agricultural land have costs attached. Subsidies to farmers will be borne by taxpayers. Debt relief will screw up banks (and as a result, actually make banks less eager to advance agricultural credit). Allowing the price of produce to rise will infuriate consumers.

If you insist on preventing the sale of agricultural land, the two best solutions are:

  1. Creating agricultural infrastructure which gives farmers information on what to plant, how to plant it, and how to sell it. This will work, but if it’s the government which takes up the job, it will work slowly, ineffectively, and be saddled with corruption.
  2. Allowing modern retail to flourish, knock the middlemen and their associated costs out of the supply chain, and give farmers a better price. This will also speed up the processes of Solution #1. The only problem is that if the AID India page was any indication, the middle class will hate this solution because it involves big corporates telling farmers what to plant and encourages (gasp!) consumption of non-local food.

But allowing farmers to sell their land costs nothing. Nobody is adversely affected by it.

Let’s continue.

*

But this will just lead to capitalists grabbing land at throwaway prices and making SEZs!

In case you haven’t noticed, capitalists are doing this right now. They are doing this with the support and love of the government. The government is abusing its position as the sole buyer of agricultural land to acquire it and sell it at a fifty percent premium (at least, the fifty percent premium held for the land my dad bought in Kanjeevaram this year). If farmers sold land directly, they could capture the premium instead.

But farmers are illiterate and unorganised and have no negotiating power.

This is a real problem. But there are solutions. An auction process is one. Landowner cooperatives for sales are another. It’s not an insurmountable problem.

Also, please note that the economic rationale of landgrabbing rests on the premise of insufficient land, and being able to charge huge prices for industrial or commercial or residential property. If land could be freely converted to nonagricultural use in the first place, the huge price differential would become a much smaller price differential.

Let’s continue.

*

But if farmers sell their land, how will we grow food?!

I could reiterate Ravikiran/ Nitin’s argument that we could just import it from the Americans, but since people think that ‘self-sufficiency’ is the killer retort to this, I will respond to this objection at a more fundamental level.

The most important point of allowing the free sale of agricultural land is not that agricultural land will be sold. It’s that agricultural land can be used as collateral.

There was once a P Sainath column where Sainath was outraged that you could get a car loan for a Mercedes at zero percent interest, while farmers had to pay twenty four percent or suchlike to finance their crops. (Update: Ah, here it is.) I will now explain why this is so.

People who get low-interest car loans can do so because of two reasons:

  1. They can provide documentary proof (income tax returns or bank statements or salary slips) which establish that they are capable of repaying the loan.
  2. A car can be repossessed and resold.

These two factors reduce the risk on the loan to such an extent that the interest rate on it can be dropped.

But the farmer has no such comfort to offer lenders. His income sucks. And – this is the most important point – even if he did offer his land as collateral, it would be worthless to the lender. Because the lender can’t sell it, remember? Nobody’s allowed to buy it. So agricultural credit is priced like a personal loan, when it could so easily be priced like a mortgage.

And this is crucial. The only thing a farmer has is his land. And the law against transfer of agricultural property ensures that he can’t borrow against it. If he could borrow, it would allow him to experiment with high yielding seeds, or to educate his kids, or to ride out droughts.

*

So if you do go to any of the vigils, please shout a few slogans about letting farmers sell their land. It will be more useful and productive than talking about local consumption and corporate interests.


2.3

September 24, 2007

WordPress is going to upgrade to version 2.3 next week. While I’m thrilled to bits about the upgrade and the core support for tags, I’m not so thrilled about having to find a tag-compatible theme. Consider my requirements for a theme:

  1. Needs to be compatible with WP 2.3 and thus with tags and widgets.
  2. Needs to be three-column.
  3. Needs to support Indic fonts (which I use rarely, but even on rare occasions they need to be rendered properly).
  4. Needs to have next post/ previous post links in every post page.
  5. Needs to not screw up embedded photos.

A few months ago, when I tried to find a theme which matched all these requirements, I ended up trying out about twenty different themes. None of them fulfilled all the requirements. By the time my disk space usage had exploded to 80% under the weight of all the new installations, the only theme which worked was the current one. Which, as is painfully obvious to anybody not reading this on a feedreader, is excruciatingly orange. My mother thinks it looks cheerful and sunny, but everyone else who ever expressed an opinion hates it.

And now the rigmarole will start anew next month. Oy vey.


I Am Tam

September 14, 2007

It’s official. My loyal readers no longer make any distinction between me and other Tam stalwarts like Chandru, Chenthil, Anti, or Ammani.

Forward the New Chozha Empire!


Congratulations, Nitin

September 14, 2007

It’s been four years since Mr. Pai planted The Acorn.


The Fundamental Interconnectedness of all Things

September 8, 2007

You may have noticed that there’s hardly been any business/ economics blogging going on here for most of the year. Most of you probably didn’t care, but in case you did, please rest assured that I haven’t given up. It’s just that right now I’m preoccupied with an idea that is not fully formed.

The problem is that this idea is multiple intersecting ideas. And while I have a vague idea of how they link up, I can’t put it into words yet. And the the things linking up include:

  1. Nandigram, Singur, and eminent domain in general (especially Ila Patnaik’s more-than-one-year-old oped on it)
  2. IIMB’s internal instant messenger
  3. The lack of public spaces for performing artists in Bangalore
  4. Why people in slums have TVs but not flush toilets (this was a Nitin Pai post a while back)
  5. Bars in Singapore
  6. Why DRL got funding from ICICI Ventures while Ranbaxy did a public issue
  7. The Bangalore Central mall
  8. Reservations
  9. The Flickr API
  10. Open source software

All these are very diverse but rest assured that they link up. The problem, as I said, is in explaining clearly how they link up. Once I discovered two weeks ago that the Flickr API was also connected to all this, separating and sorting the linkages has become easier. It’s still a jumbled mess, but I’m closer to banging it into some sort of framework than before.

Until that happens, arbitfundablogging will continue as usual.