clippings-for-you
Friday, September 6, 2013
clippings-for-you: Global survey paints dismal picture of corruption ...
clippings-for-you: Global survey paints dismal picture of corruption ...: Global survey paints dismal picture of corruption in India ...
Global survey paints dismal picture of corruption in India
Global
survey paints dismal picture of corruption in India
Data from the latest
Transparency International report throws up few surprises as far as India is
concerned.
Virtually no key institution or sector in India is seen as being
free from corruption in the latest survey of the international anti-corruption
watchdog Transparency International, which, in its report 'Global Corruption Barometer 2013' states that bribe
paying levels remain "very high" worldwide.
Data from the report offers interesting insights into global
corruption trends, but few surprises - most people in India believed that
corruption has worsened during the last two years - 40 percent of respondents
felt that corruption had increased 'a lot' and 31 per cent 'a little'.
Virtually all key institutions and sectors in India, including
the private sector, were regarded as being corrupt or extremely corrupt by
respondents - at the top of the list were political parties (86 per cent),
police (75 per cent) and public officials and civil servants as well as
parliament/legislature (65 per cent each). Least corrupt was the military
(20%).
Institutions/sectors
Percentage of people who
think
they are beset by
corruption
Political Parties
86
Police
75
Parliament/legislature
65
Public officials/civil servants
65
Education system
61
Medical and health
56
Business/private sector
50
Judiciary
45
Religious Bodies
44
Media
41
NGOs
30
Military
20
Source: Global Corruption Barometer
2013
If it is any consolation, many countries in the world face
similar problems in confronting corruption - in 51 countries political parties
were seen as the most corrupt institution and 55 per cent of respondents
thought that governments were 'run by a few big entities acting in their own
best interests.'
As for various public services and bribes being given to secure
them - 62 per cent in India reported that they or someone from their household
had paid a bribe to the police, 61 to 'registry and permit services' and 58 per
cent to 'land services'.
Public service
Percentage of those
who had paid a bribe
Police
62
Registry and permit services
61
Land services
58
Utilities
48
Education
48
Tax revenue and/or Customs
41
Judiciary
36
Medical and health
34
Source: Global Corruption Barometer
2013
Among the common reasons for paying a bribe, 36 per cent in
India said it was the only way to get a service and 35 per cent, to 'speed up
things'.
About 47 per cent in India viewed corruption as a very serious
problem in the public sector, placing it fifth in terms of severity on a 1-5
ranking scale. And 33 per cent placed it in the fourth position on the scale.
Most people in India also felt that personal contacts were important to get
things done in their dealings with the public sector - 31 per cent felt it was
'very important' and 35 per cent 'important'. (For the purposes of the survey,
'public sector' meant public sector institutions and services that are owned
and/or run by the government.)
And not surprisingly, the majority in India did not think the
government was effectively fighting corruption - 26 per cent felt it was least
effective and 42 per cent ineffective. The percentage of those who 'strongly
agreed' or 'agreed' that ordinary people could make a difference in the fight
against corruption was 55.
The survey covered 1,14,000 people in 107 countries. Globally,
27 per cent of respondents reported having paid a bribe when accessing public services
and institutions during the last 12 months.
The report has come out with these recommendations to globally
combat corruption: make integrity and trust the founding principles of public
institutions and services; bring back the rule of law; hold the corrupt to
account; clean-up democratic processes and give people the tools and protection
to fight against corruption.
T. RAMACHANDRAN Appeared in “The Hindu”
Institutions/sectors
Percentage of people who
think
they are beset by
corruption
Political Parties
86
Police
75
Parliament/legislature
65
Public officials/civil servants
65
Education system
61
Medical and health
56
Business/private sector
50
Judiciary
45
Religious Bodies
44
Media
41
NGOs
30
Military
20
Public service
Percentage of those
who had paid a bribe
Police
62
Registry and permit services
61
Land services
58
Utilities
48
Education
48
Tax revenue and/or Customs
41
Judiciary
36
Medical and health
34
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
clippings-for-you: "LEAN IN" BY SHERYL SANDBERG
clippings-for-you: "LEAN IN" BY SHERYL SANDBERG: AN EXCELLENT BOOK BY SHERYL SANDBERG ... COO .. OF FACEBOOK.. A REVIEW A MUST READ BY BOTH WOMEN AND MEN Women, Work, a...
"LEAN IN" BY SHERYL SANDBERG
AN EXCELLENT BOOK BY SHERYL SANDBERG ...
COO .. OF FACEBOOK..
A REVIEW
A MUST READ BY BOTH WOMEN AND MEN
Women,
Work, and the Will to Lead
By Sheryl Sandberg
It’s a lesson that comes through loud and clear in
Sheryl Sandberg’s new book, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead.” Her
point, in a nutshell, is that notwithstanding the many gender biases that still
operate all over the workplace, excuses and justifications won’t get women
anywhere. Instead, believe in yourself, give it your all, “lean in” and “don’t
leave before you leave” — which is to say, don’t doubt your ability to combine
work and family and thus edge yourself out of plum assignments before you even
have a baby. Leaning in can promote a virtuous circle: you assume you can juggle
work and family, you step forward, you succeed professionally, and then you’re
in a better position to ask for what you need and to make changes that could
benefit others.
No one who reads this book will ever doubt that
Sandberg herself has the will to lead, not to mention the requisite commitment,
intelligence and ferocious work ethic. Sandberg has been the chief operating
officer of Facebook since 2008. At 43, she has already had a storied career:
research assistant to Lawrence Summers at the World Bank; management consultant
at McKinsey; chief of staff to Summers at the Treasury Department; and six and
a half years at Google, where she rose to the post of vice president of global
online sales and operations. She has also made it to the top of the notoriously
male-dominated world of Silicon Valley, where the paucity of women among the
ranks of computer scientists and engineers is still all too visible.
Sandberg is not just tough, however. She also comes
across as compassionate, funny, honest and likable. Indeed, although she refers
early on in the book to a study showing that for men success and likability are
positively correlated, whereas for women they are inversely correlated, she
manages to beat that bum rap. (Who can forget when Barack Obama, in one of his
few slips on the 2008 campaign trail, said patronizingly to his chief rival:
“You’re likable enough, Hillary”?) Sandberg’s advice to young women to be more
ambitious, which can sound like a finger-wagging admonishment when taken out of
context, is framed here in more encouraging terms — “What would you do if you
weren’t afraid?” — addressing the self-doubt that still holds many women back.
Most important, Sandberg is willing to draw the
curtain aside on her own insecurities. She describes the many times in her
career when she was deeply unsure of herself, and the uncertainty that has
never entirely gone away:
“I still face situations that I fear are beyond my
capabilities. I still have days when I feel like a fraud. And I still sometimes
find myself spoken over and discounted while men sitting next to me are not.
But now I know how to take a deep breath and keep my hand up. I have learned to
sit at the table.”
Sandberg quotes other powerful women sharing their
own insecurities, including a wonderful anecdote from Virginia Rometty, the
first female chief executive officer of I.B.M. As Sandberg tells the story,
Rometty was offered a “big job” early in her career, but she worried she might
not have the proper experience. So she told the recruiter she would have to
think it over. When she discussed the offer with her husband, he pointed out,
“Do you think a man would ever have answered that question that way?” It all
comes down to confidence, Sandberg suggests, and it is easier to be confident
if you realize that your role models have plenty of doubts of their own.
Sandberg’s career as a feminist champion began with
her 2010 TED talk, in which she first laid out her lean-in message. She
followed up with a commencement address to the Barnard class of 2011. Both went
viral. “Lean In” builds on the themes of these earlier talks, bolstered by
extensive references to scholarly works and popular literature. She advises women
to “make your partner a real partner,” recalling how she and her husband set
patterns early on in their relationship that made them genuine equals when it
came to child care. Her phrase “It’s a jungle gym, not a ladder” describes the
many different paths careers can take, sideways and even downward on their way
up. She also shares Eric Schmidt’s advice to her when she was considering a job
offer at Google, which was a less attractive option than others she had at the
time: “Only one criterion mattered when picking a job — fast growth.” Sandberg
connects this to the value of personal growth, even when, or especially when,
you are afraid.
“Lean In” is full of many such gems, slogans that
ambitious women would do well to pin up on their wall. Figure out what you want
to do before you meet with the people who can hire you. Ask yourself
constantly: “How can I do better? What am I doing that I don’t know? What am I not doing
that I don’t see?” “Done is better than perfect.” And many readers will enjoy
the glimpse into the lives of the rich and famous that Sandberg affords. Head
lice are an all-too-frequent and upsetting part of parenting, but when Sandberg
discovered her two children had them, they were all flying to a business
conference on the corporate jet of John Donahoe, the C.E.O. of eBay.
Inevitable questions of privilege aside, many
parents will think, as I did, that this is a young woman’s book. Indeed, I
nodded in recognition at so much of what Sandberg recounts, page after page,
remembering my own early professional experiences and looking back to the days
when my children were 5 and 3 (the age when they complain that they don’t see
enough of you, rather than wanting you to get out of their face). This is also
the book of someone who has never met a challenge she couldn’t surmount by
working harder and believing in herself. But for the 229 missing female Fortune
500 leaders, as well as the hundreds of thousands of women who should be
occupying lower-level leadership positions but aren’t, the problem is not leaning
back but encountering a tipping point, a situation in which what was once a
manageable and enjoyable work-family balance can no longer be sustained —
regardless of ambition, confidence or even an equal partner. Sandberg is right
to say that it is easier to handle work-family conflicts from as high a
position on the career ladder as possible, but if in fact it’s the tipping
points that tip women out of the work force, or at least prevent them from
rising, then no amount of psychological coaching will make a difference.
That is the real debate here, and it’s an important
one. Sandberg puts her finger on it when she writes: “For decades, we have
focused on giving women the choice to work inside or outside the home. . . .
But we have to ask ourselves if we have become so focused on supporting
personal choices that we’re failing to encourage women to aspire to
leadership.” This view accords with some of the findings of the Princeton
Steering Committee on Undergraduate Women’s Leadership, which concluded in a
March 2011 report that young women at Princeton often did not put themselves
forward for leadership positions and were sometimes actively discouraged by
others when they did. The Princeton committee also found that “the start
counts,” meaning that the first few weeks on campus are crucial for women: an
early willingness to step forward as a leader will lay the groundwork for
future opportunities.
Still, after the start comes a very long road, with
lots of bumps and what the law professor Joan Williams calls “the maternal
wall” smack in the middle of it. Sandberg’s approach, as important as it is, is
at best half a loaf. Moreover, given her positions first at Google and now at
Facebook, it is hard not to notice that her narrative is what corporate America
wants to hear. For both the women who have made it and the men who work with
them, it is cheaper and more comfortable to believe that what they need to do
is simply urge younger women to be more like them, to think differently and
negotiate more effectively, rather than make major changes in the way their
companies work. Young women might be much more willing to lean in if they saw
better models and possibilities of fitting work and life together: ways of
slowing down for a while but still staying on a long-term promotion track; of
getting work done on their own time rather than according to a fixed schedule;
of being affirmed daily in their roles both as parents and as professionals.
Some workplaces are beginning to make these
changes. The Boston Consulting Group, for instance, has discovered the value of
predictable time off every week, which leads team members to work much more
collaboratively in ways that support one another’s needs. As documented in
“Sleeping With Your Smartphone,” by the Harvard Business School professor
Leslie Perlow, this approach has required a deep cultural change for
consultants used to a 24/7 environment, as well as a commitment from
management. But the business benefits have proved their financial and
psychological worth. Other examples include the adoption of a Results Only Work
Environment, which grants employees complete flexibility as to when, where and
how they work, as long as they get their work done.
So is the dearth of women in top jobs due to a lack
of ambition or a lack of support? Both, as Sandberg herself grants, proposing
that women should “wage battles on both fronts.” Yet she chooses to concentrate
only on the “internal obstacles,” the ways in which women hold themselves back.
This is unfortunate. As a feminist and a corporate leader, Sandberg seems
ideally placed to ask the question that all too often gets lost amid the welter
of talk about what women should do, what they should want and how they should
behave. When it comes to ensuring that caregivers still have paths to the
corner office, how can business lean in?
This review was written by Anne-Marie Slaughter, a professor of politics and
international affairs at Princeton, was the director of policy planning at the
State Department from 2009 to 2011.
Friday, August 30, 2013
clippings-for-you: SKY IS NOT AT ALL THE LIMIT .. EVEN FOR INDIANS !!...
clippings-for-you: SKY IS NOT AT ALL THE LIMIT .. EVEN FOR INDIANS !!...: SKY IS NOT AT ALL THE LIMIT .. EVEN FOR INDIANS !!! NEXT DESTINATION .. MARS ---------------------------------------------...
SKY IS NOT AT ALL THE LIMIT .. EVEN FOR INDIANS !!!
SKY IS NOT AT ALL THE LIMIT .. EVEN FOR INDIANS !!!
NEXT DESTINATION .. MARS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------
As the deadline for registration nears, over 8,000 Indians have so
far signed up for the one-way trip to Mars and settle down on the red
planet, as 'Mars One' project is planning to establish a colony there
in the next 10 years.
'Mars One', a not-for-profit foundation
intends to establish a permanent
human settlement on Mars in 2023 and is registering those interested to
make it up there. India stands fourth among other countries of the
world with 8,107 applicants, as on August 27.
The top 10 countries to enrol are the USA (37,852), China (13,124), Brazil (8,686), India (8,107), Russia
(7,138), Britain (6,999), Mexico (6,771), Canada (6,593), Spain
(3,621) and Philippines (3,516) as on August 22, Aashima Dogra
of 'Mars One' said.
With August 31 this year being the last date for registering, 'Mars One' has already received interest
from more than 1,65,000 people hoping to be the first humans on Mars.
"The Mars One Application Program
is turning out to be the most desired job vacancy in the world. People
from over 140 countries are looking towards the final frontier
and envisioning their life on another planet," she said.
Mars One believes that human settlement
on the red planet was possible with existing technologies and it plans
to integrate components that are well tested and readily available
from industry leaders worldwide.
"The first footprint on Mars and lives of the crew thereon
will captivate and inspire generations; it is this public interest that
will help finance this human mission to Mars," she said. DC
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Life on Earth was
kick-started thanks to a key mineral deposited by a meteorite from Mars,
according to a novel theory aired on Thursday.
The
vital ingredient was an oxidised mineral form of the element molybdenum, which
helped prevent carbon molecules — the building blocks of life — from degrading into a tar-like goo. The idea comes
from Steven Benner, a professor at the Westheimer Institute for Science and
Technology in Gainesville, Florida, who was to present it at an international conference of geochemists
in Florence, Italy.
“It’s only when molybdenum
becomes highly oxidised that it is able to influence how early life formed,”
Benner said in a press release.
“This
form of molybdenum couldn’t have been available on Earth at the time life first
began, because three billion years ago the surface of the Earth had very little oxygen, but Mars did.” In this
violent epoch of the Solar System, the infant Earth was pounded by comets and
asteroids.
Mars,
too, would have come under bombardment, and the impacts would have caused
Martian rubble to bounce into space, where they would have lingered until eventually being captured by Earth’s
gravity.
“The
evidence is building that we are actually all Martians, that life started on
Mars and came to Earth on a rock. It’s lucky we ended up here as Earth is life sustaining” said Benner. .. DC
Thursday, August 29, 2013
clippings-for-you: Mr. RATAN TATA on leadership in INDIA
clippings-for-you: Mr. RATAN TATA on leadership in INDIA: Mr. RATAN TATA on leadership in INDIA Where have the leaders GONE .. Delhi: Former chairman of Tata Group Ratan Tat...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)