Monday, December 28, 2015

Aadhaar, Poverty and Money

You may find something amiss here, so please ignore my eccentricities. I have set out to write something on money.
When you purchase any item or goods/service you are indebted to the person who provided you the service and hence to compensate him you pay him some money. That person in turn gets some other goods/service for himself and pays others with the money he earned from you.
People are so much interdependent on each other that we transact with money just too often to realize the true meaning of what a payment means. That we are increasingly dependent on each other and we should be thankful to each other for doing each others work in the best possible way.
I sought the help of google for the true meaning of money and gleaned some new information.

The first item on the search result was about a country(currency devalued-ringgit) and the author argued that we trade our lifetime for the salary that we earn. We work about 176 hours per month to earn the salary and we trade each day for that days earnings. If our currency gets devalued we get lesser than earlier and may not be able to afford goods that we once were able to.

The second item in the result list gave an exhaustive meaning of money: Money as survival, money as liberation, money as time, money as lubrication(read as greasing palms), money as status, money as keeping score, money as means, money as control, money as evil etc.

People are generally smart and since god has given equal intelligence, that cannot be a measure of wealth. Poor too are smart and are trying everything they can to make ends meet. Rich have not done anything great to achieve richness as has been amply substantiated by research at the Abdul latif jameel poverty action lab(JPAL). Of course there are exceptions. Poor remain poor majorly because their emergency expenditure on things such as medicare leaves them with little to live with dignity.
One important difference of developed countries from underdeveloped ones is the transparency in money flows. Richer countries have more transparent monetary transactions and their Cash-to-GDP ratio is low.
Sweden has turned cashless overtime and less than 2% of its GDP is circulating as free cash. This figure for India is around 13%. I read that in Sweden even the church/petty shops are carrying card readers. Banks have stopped taking in cash deposits and are busy disposing cash counting machines. You can guess how much of a transformation that is. Card companies are laughing their way to the bank as every transaction is getting them handsome commission.

We can learn from that country and try to predict by what time we too will go the same path. My estimation is that India will take considerably shorter time to go cashless. I think we will reach there in another 10 years ie by 2025 when our economy becomes 10 trillion US dollars.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Zero rating of financial applications like wallets and internet banking a must

While the government is trying to encourage e-cash and cashless payments progress has been limited.
Instead of letting zero rating of facebook where people waste their time, it would be better if government allows zero rating of the financial applications like wallets and internet banking. These applications do not take large amounts of bandwidth and should be subsidized. Anyone with a valid sim card and 2g/3g/4g capable mobile phone should be able to use the wallets without any data charges just like they are able to dial emergency numbers without any balance.
Even though India has seen adoption of mobile telephony in a big way poor people have been left in the lurch. Tele-density in the rural places is still to cross the midway mark.
While there are 950 million active mobile connections many people use dual sim and are double counted. Number of unique mobile users is just 650 million. Children below 12-13 years rarely are given mobile phones for personal use. This means more than 200-300 million adults cannot afford a mobile connection.
UPA-II had toyed with a scheme of giving people basic mobile handsets with minimum monthly recharges. The election code of conduct came into being and the scheme could not be implemented. With a change of government the scheme has not seen the light of the day.
It is predicted that by 2020 there will be 100 crore aadhaar numbers, 100 crore JanDhan Accounts and 100 crore mobile users. Payment banks would want their wallet applications to be linked to these accounts and competition will drive down costs. This potent combination of enablers will lead to a revolution in digital payments.
Hence to enable payments by the poorest of the poor zero rating of financial applications should be considered. In fact the government need not give any subsidy as the banks, wallet companies/payment banks and/or telecom operators would be more than willing to pick up the tab.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Digital india has a slow and steady start

It is indeed good news that DIGI-locker launched by the government has crossed 1 million users as of 24th november,2015. Visit the site to know more. Latest statistics show that the number of users is 1011787 and 1176821 documents have been uploaded.

Other initiatives of the Digital India campaign like eHospital online registration system(ORS) have also started to be increasingly used. Indian patients have traditionally been shortchanged by the government medicare system. With government hospitals overflowing with patients and a steady stream of people getting in/out to inquire or seek appointment. Now, they can book an appointment with a doctor at any of the premier government hospitals from their homes. Visit this site to know more. Latest statistics show that there are 14 number of hospitals on the portal, appointments taken today stands at 409, total online appointments at 92905, e-Hospital New patient's Appointments Taken Today at 4669, e-Hospital Followup patient's Appointments Taken Today at 3715, e-Hospital Total Appointments since 1st July 2015 at 917477. The numbers in the site need a bit of explanation to understand but since the last time i visited the site a few weeks back the number of appointments has grown by leaps and bounds. It was somewhere around 80k appointments and after three weeks i see the number has zoomed to 917k.

Biometric attendance in government departments has taken off to a great start. 612 organizations are onboard and with 170106 registered employees and 78335 present today, 4507 active devices today. Visit this site for the latest. The attendance of government employees will be slowly expanded to include all departments of the government.

National Scholarship portal at the site here is a must visit site for meritorious students from backward castes and minorities. Latest statistics show 7 departments/ministries on board using the site with 19 registered schemes and 1138 registered boards/universities and 8468953 total temporary registrations and 6828397 completed applications submitted out of which 3934310 completed applications submitted with aadhaar.

Digitize India platform is a program where government departments after scanning the documents to be digitized can take it to the final conclusion step where documents image is converted to text. The slogan here is "pixel to text" and volunteers with aadhaar can register and earn points. These points can then be redeemed for cash which gets deposited in their aadhaar linked bank account. Visit this site for the latest news. Statistics from this site say that there are 261439 Documents with 2415448 Snippets out of which 2119267 are Digitized and there are as of now 14088 contributors.

Finally the My Gov website has a cool interface and conducts several contests and actively seeks suggestions from the people in the running of the government. Here is the site. Statistics show that there are 1.58Million Registered Members of MyGov and 155.16K Submissions in 370 Tasks and 1.29Million Comments in 404 Discussion Themes. I have recently suggested in the MyGov site that the government should set targets to every department and depute resources to oversee digitization. If needed they should also take help of volunteers such as engineering college students who want to do internship. I have also suggested to the same site that the government should reveal the identity of those employees who are habitually flouting rules regarding attendance in office.

This is definitely not the end of the list. It is just to show you how a beginning has been made. There is talk of launching a dashboard depicting all the progress happening with real-time statistics from government departments. Such an open and transparent system would go a long way in creating confidence among people and people may draw comfort in the improving government services. I also happened to visit a site which does data visualization of government statistics and presents statistics in an easy to understand manner.
Just the other day i read news about blood banks being mandated to reveal statistics of daily blood availability in a portal. Human milk banks are being launched across states where infants could be given nourishment in case they do not receive it from their mothers. Small steps like these have endeared the new government with the people. Saw a dashboard of the rural electrification progress, dashboard of employees provident fund and several other organizations. Conclusion is that India has started dashing towards the finish line.


This is my earlier post on the digital India theme.... => http://aadhaar4governance.blogspot.in/2015/02/digital-india-to-rely-on-aadhaar.html 


Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Unified Payment Interface - An eagerly awaited service



Imagine more than a billion users of a payment service so easy to use, so secure and so simple that even kids would like to use it to pay for their daily dose of kinder joy. This would be the mega mega mega event that finally would drive the last nail in the coffin of cash here in india.

The idea or motivation for a unified payment interface arose after significant enrollment of people in the aadhaar project. Payment banks were conceived by RBI as banks which would operate to ease payments using electronic means and would only offer deposits and no lending. Eleven licenses were handed out majority of them to telecom firms and a few industrial houses with deep pockets.

Mobile money transactions have lately crossed 10k crore mark in terms of value(monthly). IMPS even though secure and relatively free of fraud had seen limited uptake. Unified Payment Interface which is built on top of IMPS would use any of the publicly known identifiers like aadhaar number or email Id or mobile number or virtual payment Id as a token in payment transactions. No one would know whether a bank account or a payment bank account or a wallet is linked with these identifiers at the back end. This makes the process of transferring money from the mobile a lot more easier.

Not only this, you could also request someone to take money from your account by sharing your token and then authorizing the transaction by entering a password in your banking app.


Now comes the most elegant part. Smart phones with apps from either your bank/payment bank/wallet would have a dashboard where you could enter anybody's identifier and amount to be transferred. The money transfer would happen immediately. What is more you could set a limit to the amount that can be transacted daily, monthly and per transaction also. Needless to mention this app will be very very popular as

a) It would be usable throughout the country for every conceivable payment, be it to purchase vegetables or bus ticket while traveling or any other small ticket transaction.

b) This interface would be really simple and easy to use.

c) This interface will be the one provided by the government and hence meant for the masses.

Finally by end of 2016 we would witness a moment so great that it would be mentioned as the dawn of an era in cashless payments in India.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

How telecom companies and websites collaborate to milk customers

You might have a limited data internet connection. If you visit some site where videos play automatically it consumes nearly 20-30 MB of your data at one go. News sites serve advertisements at the cost of consumers.
Let's calculate:
My internet connection is a BSNL(cheapest) USB Dongle the latest data pack for which i have recharged is offering 5 GB for two months(60 days) with cost of 451 rupees. Hence 10 MB costs nearly 1 rupee to me. One advertisement costs nearly 2-3 rupees. Over several browsing sessions this may come to nearly 10-15 rupees per day.
Automatic page refresh of news sites is another technique these sites drive up the data traffic to their sites.
People wishing to watch news are being bombarded with unwanted videos and causing lot of unnecessary traffic. Someone needs to take up the cudgels against such fleecing by sites/telecom companies.
This they claim as a means of monetization and revenue generation.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Aadhaar opponents weakening the project

A matter of utmost urgency is to give strength to the aadhaar project. Instead activists have been able to weaken the project by the following ways.
1) Misleading people into multiple registrations.
2) Making people fear for privacy and consequently people were unwilling to divulge their mobile number and email id in their enrollment. Hence it has become difficult for such people to update their demographic data.
3) In DBTL lobbying for cash transfers even without aadhaar linking and hence giving scope for corruption.
4) Suggesting simpler authentications like mobile OTP instead of biometric authentication which can cause the project to be imperiled and that may be misused for corrupt purposes.
5) Going hammer and tongs against the very foundation of the project and trying to declare it unconstitutional, illegal and dangerous.
6) Without any sense of conscience the opponents are just about making one after another inconsistent arguments. First they argue that aadhaar number will not be universal and people will be excluded. Then change tack and say "Each and Every person is being given an aadhaar without proper verification" and it has become free for all. Which suggests that some people should not be given aadhaar which contradicts universality principle/inclusion objectives.
7) They accuse that it would be a privacy violation if aadhaar keeps track of the location/address of a person; on the other hand they want aadhaar to be accurately used as an address proof. In fact they even want aadhaar to keep track of all past addresses of a person. It baffles me as to how aadhaar can be used as an address proof without it storing address of the person. Some fear that it may be used to locate whereabouts of persons, but conveniently forget that it is apps like facebook/uber/ola etc that keep a check on your whereabouts and not some overzealous govt employee who is out to profile you.
8) Another inconsistency in the opponents arguments is about digital lockers. First they say people should not be denied any benefit for want of aadhaar card and then add that digital lockers are being given to only people with aadhaar. Even a first standard student understands that the concept of digital locker is like any other service such as google drive or dropbox that is served from the cloud and used to backup files. What stops these morons from using such services without requiring aadhaar.
9) On the one hand they fear being tracked for purchases of rations and on the other express sadness at the poor aadhaar seeding in databases. So much so that they want both aadhaar seeding percentage to increase and aadhaar should be kept voluntary all the while.
10) On the one hand they say aadhaar based DBT does not work and on the other hand concede that only 30-50% of the transfers are aadhaar based and conclude that aadhaar based DBT is a failure.
11) On the one hand they fear about the excessive powers of the govt in tracking money flows and on the other hand express frustration at the slow speed with which databases are being inter-linked. Even going to the extent of proclaiming that aadhaar cannot be used to reduce black money in the economy. If the govt does haste, they criticize that and if it is slow in some way they criticize that too.

Finally the opposition for aadhaar comes from elderly people who understand privacy but not technology. Also from people who don't seem to care too much about corruption. I mean "I know it exists but i don't bother much about it as long as it does not affect me" kind of attitude.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

String Theory

Increasing usage of English both as a language in business communications and informal communication has given scope of using the language in machinist, twisted and contorted way.
I may have to warn my readers that despite good speaking and writing skills in English i am no fan of the language. Coming to computers there are times when computers spew out terse error messages, welcome messages or communication generated by programs. Many people do not "get it" when computers spew out such messages as they lack personal touch or any sort of clue that the computer is done with processing and has generated the response.
We can see similar pattern when celebrities hire professionals who manage their image/reputation. Press and media always want to get sound bytes from people involved in any incident. Professionals are hired to give out statements or issue clarifications on behalf of their clients. They just read out text which often gives a different version of the matter which protects the interests of their customers. I call this deployment of a string. A classic example that i recall is when A R Rahman(the Mozart from madras) spoke to the media, in his initial career days, he was projected as a quiet and demure person, even going to the extent of being dumb. Image consultants had a torrid time convincing people that the composer does indeed speak.
People always want to be shown in good light or like to be praised. Smt Sonia Gandhi and Pappu-G struggle so much to deliver inspiring speeches, that they are being ridiculed in the social media. Their struggles with delivering speeches including the infamous cheat sheet, is a talk of the town. Indians struggle with speaking good English or getting the American accent right. Sonia Gandhi struggles with getting her Hindi pronunciation right and Nandan Nilekani(Creator of aadhaar, having stood for elections and lost) struggles to speak in Kannada. Linguistically challenged people they may be.
Teachers like me in schools and colleges face a dilemma when it is required to teach the definition of something. Sentences upon sentences to be mugged by the students aka virus style(definition of a machine) in the movie "three idiots". It looks as though people have trains of strings/dialogues/quotes instead of thoughts in their mind. In a study which appeared in the paper today it's found that people are developing amnesia by being addicted to the internet. They don't need to remember any facts when they can just google about it. Information overload is somehow rendering people disabled(intellectually).
Contests are being conducted based on novelty of search strings on google.
Coming back to deployment, we all have been to colleges and been afraid of the ragging. Some of us have been ragged. Once upon a time, the ragged ones were the ones who ragged. Ragging involved "Instructing juniors" to do certain things. This verbal communication of instructions is what i call deployment, obviously against ones wishes.
There can be another kind of deployment a much more positive one by a leader. A leader like narendra modi spells out certain instructions in the form of plain speak or cry or a slogan.
Coming to software, strings are considered to be the basics of any language. In computers strings can be made up of ones and zeros and taken eight or sixteen at a time be interpreted as alphabets or digits. Deployment in some sense of code/software/program is similar to what i described earlier. When software is deployed it leads us to a system. A software/hardware combo.
In one of my classes i joked about a Hindi movie dialogue(again a string) which goes like this=> After having been beaten black and blue paresh rawal says government should make a system, a code of conduct for criminals. Hit where they can hit. Why do they hit where they should not(in the groin).
Obviously with little humor in the example i did not get the students interested in a system.
On another day when i needed to teach software architecture, i had to explain that a system needs to be taken apart and its parts and their interrelationships are to be studied. I gave an example of kumbalakayi or pumpkin in kannada. On auspicious occasions in olden days it was a practice to sacrifice animals. Nowadays they fill red liquid in a pumpkin and throw it on a stone to cut it to pieces. I said do the same for a system. Throw a system on to a big stone and let it break into pieces. Then study the parts. Very little humor again.
Coming back, in list processing/predicate logic every sentence is associated with a truth value and a grammar is a rule to form compound sentences or to deduce from a given sentence(predicate logic). Machines are very close to borrowing intelligence from humans. So we are at a point in history where we should think about all those spheres of life where machine learning and robotics would impact us.
I have gone through books on string theory in physics too. To compound matters further all matter is supposed to be formed of strings. What you are reading is a string too.
I don't have a particular style of writing and agree that there are great writers and poets in this world who create magic out of strings. Perhaps trains of thoughts in our minds too have a music or symphony that can be deciphered some day.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Advantages of Internet banking, mobile banking, wallets and apps

The world around us is enveloped with gadgets of all kinds. We use mobile apps to travel new places, use internet banking to send money to others, mobile banking to do the same with frugal technology and wallets a newly emerging class of bank accounts used to transact for small amounts.

Trends suggest that internet banking is growing at more than 30% in India and the number of unique users crossed 40 million recently(June,2015). This number is nearly 20% of the regular internet users in the country which has crossed 200 million. A majority of the internet users are accessing the internet through their mobiles.

More than 100 million Indians are on Facebook. Internet access remains way too slow and expensive. Its been only five or ten years since common men and women in India other than techies started using the internet.

Apart from keeping in touch with friends via social networks people are using internet for net banking which has caused a lot of excitement in the banking industry. People don't visit banks as much as they would otherwise and there is a perceptible fall in branch footfalls. Tech savvy investors are dabbling in stock markets and benefiting immensely from internet for transactions.

For a large number of internet users who travel in trains, online railway ticket booking is a very useful activity. Several travel and hotel room booking sites like makemytrip, travelguru etc have made travel easier.

Mobile bill payment, Insurance premium payment, movie ticket booking, air ticket booking, electricity bill payments, property tax payments and a variety of  unheard uses of internet banking has made it a must have. I advise those unwilling to take the plunge to try it soon.

Online shopping sites like flipkart, amazon, ebay, snapdeal, myntra etc are doing roaring business. New startups with unique concepts are being launched every day. Students of computer science are gung ho about android app development and working hard to get premium positions in the industry.

Sky is the limit for the digital revolution currently played out and its causing lot of changes in the lifestyle of people. Digital India with the slogan of presence less and paper less governance promises the sky for the people. Aadhaar has been a mixed success so far as its utility as a financial address is yet to be fully realized. It would be good to avoid the pitfalls and use this technology only for the benefits that it promises and not as a tool to harass or intimidate people.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

National Informatics Center - At the forefront of innovation-Oh Really?

I just went to the national informatics center website casually thinking that it will just be another government website and what i found really enticed me. Project achievements in individual states and throughout the country looked like a hundred revolutions in a micro universe of its own.
E-Governance projects of the government of India have only demonstrated that things can be done and that too despite the system than because of it. That these projects have been successful shows that change can be brought about even by the so called "inefficient" and "lethargic" bureaucracy.
Government departments to share source codes of E-governance apps that they developed. This is a news that should warm the cockles of the heart of any E-Governance enthusiast.
However, Our government is exhibiting myopic vision by relying on the national informatics center for each software that they need. What they should actually be doing is to call for tenders and award to the lowest bidder. A local ecosystem of software developers will emerge who will actively involve in ideating and conceiving E-Governance projects.
The problems of each project implemented by NIC is that it appears more like a technology demonstrator and not some project that was meant to be used. Despite working since so many years on digitizing PDS system progress in many states has been tardy. It seems as though computerization still is resisted in government circles.
There are a few bright spots in the administration like Shri. R S Sharma, Secretary in the Department of IT.
I would like to talk about a few remarkable achievements of the NIC.
Aadhaar Enabled Biometric Attendance System is one such project. This project if implemented by every department right down to government schools then it can bring in a lot of efficiency.
Others like Bhoomi project in karnataka and clones in other states called by a variety of names if implemented on a national scale with inputs from ISRO and all departments, it would be awesome.
Some of the projects like the dissemination of information during 2014 general elections are the ones where NIC likes to pat its own back. 
NIC has developed software for automation of courts but this is not being taken up for further enhancement. 
NIC has implemented software for automation in government hospitals. 
NIC has developed software to register marriages. 
It has developed software to register land records. 
It is behind the Direct Benefit Transfer program and the software that supports the DBTL(world's largest social sector scheme) was developed by NIC.
You just name any field the government works in and more often than not you will find an NIC application running.

Please visit this site for more info=> http://www.nic.in/projects

This site mentions about nearly 1096 projects that NIC has dipped its fingers into.
It just needs a grand visionary like Narendra Modi to transform these standalone applications into a single seamlessly unified system served from government owned data centers(cloud).

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Booster dose for the economy

Narendra modi government has got down to business with nearly 9 months of his government. There are several moves he made that have caused a great bull run in the market and several more steps expected.

1) JanDhan Yojana:
Within five months between Aug,2014 to Jan,2015 the government got 11 crore poor households to open bank accounts.

2) Aadhaar linked Direct Benefit Transfer:
What congress could not do the narendra modi government succeeded in doing. Nearly 80% of LPG consumers have become cash transfer compliant within a short span of five months from Nov,2014 to March,2015. Not even a whimper of opposition. Commercial cylinder sales have boomed. Diversion reduced.

3) Swacch Bharath Abhiyaan:
There is slow progress on this but the people are getting more aware. Waste segregation and cleanliness are being given top priority. Construction of toilets, cleaning of the ganga all have been given funds.

4) Coal Auctions:
States are going to benefit immensely with auctions of coal mines. CAG estimates of loss of revenue is found to be grossly underestimated. I just don't understand why Iron Ore and other mineral mining licenses are also not auctioned.

5) Spectrum Auctions:
There will be a telecom boom very soon with telco's getting larger blocks of spectrum. 3G data volumes are doubling every six months. ARPMs of telecom players is on the rise.

6) Insurance Bill:
FDI in insurance and pension sector is raised from 26% to 49% and this will lead to huge amounts of FDI come into this sector.

7) Labour Reforms:
Making hiring and firing easier is good for the industry. It raises productivity of the workers and also causes firms to be fitter. Many states are getting on board on this.

8) Liberal share of taxes for the states:
Share of states in the central taxes is raised. This will lead to more money with the states and help them in better management of their economies/budget.

9) Ammendments to the Land Aquisition Bill:
Much needed ammendments of those provisions which were anti-industry need to be made. Keenly following the developments on this.

10) Dilution of the FSA:
Food Security Act went overboard with its 69% population beneficiary cutoff. This is proposed to be pruned to 40%. Better targeting using aadhaar enabled DBT is proposed.

11) Budget:
Lots of incentives to the middle class to save. A few concessions here and there. Nothing much otherwise. Still the general and railway budget need not do anything as most of the steps/changes are being done outside the budget.

12) IRCTC to become like flipkart:
Nearly everyone who browses internet in India has an account with the Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation in case you did not know. So this portal which is always busy is not upto the mark in terms of handling traffic or monetizing its traffic. Railways can make big bucks by launching a wallet for purchases of ticket and also trying to branch into retail-shopping.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Striving for legitimacy

I remember a dialogue by govinda(A popular actor of bollywood in the 90's) in some movie of his where he declares first two floors of a multistory building as illegal. In india a majority of people err and brush the law in a wrong way either wantonly or due to ignorance.
I remember another incident where a son of a leading political figure of yesteryear declare that his father is illegitimate, after DNA tests confirm that he indeed is his fathers son, something which his mother claimed all along, and his father denied.(illegitimate father of a legitimate son)

Free dictionary defines illegitimate as
a. Being against established or accepted rules and standards

In India, Seemingly lawless state and constant media hype over issues big and small has resulted in more awareness among the people.
People strive for legitimacy and want things like money, land, buildings and marriages to be pucca (legal,regular holding,legitimate ownership and solemnized by the society respectively).

Most of the agricultural land in the country is documented in paper which is getting eaten by pests fast. Digitization of land records is seeing resistance from landlords. Buildings are getting constructed without any concurrence with plan.....
Without legitimate holding there is more orphan money. When black money gets created it gets used in lavish spending under constant fear of the law. Sahara episode showed that improper documentation and inadequate KYC lead to people loosing their hard earned money. Undocumented people without proper addresses(read land or buildings) are hard to trace. Supreme court is scratching its head over how it can return money taken(by Sahara)from people when even their names are not properly documented let alone addresses.

Aadhaar(unique identification number) can act as a financial address and a point in space which can map to a person on earth one to one. From there any money that person earns can be returned to him in case it needs to be. Not only this any land or building record with aadhaar number seeded will be easier to establish ownership of.
Hence many city corporations and transport departments etc are going for linking building records and driving licenses with UID-Aadhaar.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Digital India to rely on Aadhaar

The story so far is nothing short of a thriller. We had a change of government and the new government has broadened the scope of the aadhaar project.

Let me list out a few of the initiatives towards a greater reliance on aadhaar.

1) The big news is that the election commission has voted in favour of linking aadhaar with electoral rolls. I experienced it in the site www.nvsp.in. Possibly electronic voting may be introduced for the armed forces.

2) The other news is that passport office will speed up issuing passport for aadhaar card holders. Those with aadhaar cards are expected to get passport within 10 days and the time consuming police verification step is going to be undertaken after issuance of passport. Needless to mention if the PCC(Physical Police Verification-Police Clear Certificate) is not obtained then a passport may be revoked.

3) The budget is a very eagerly awaited exercise this month as it may spell out a new way of disbursing fertilizer subsidies. Kisan Credit Card, Soil Health Card, Aadhaar and other documents like the jan dhan account may be relied on to directly transfer fertilizer subsidy.

4) Cellular Operators Association of India(COAI) is piloting a method of issuing sim cards by instant aadhaar verification. The earlier method of filling up the Customer Acquisition Form(CAF) will be done away with.

5) UIDAI has started a new method of retrieving lost aadhaar cards. In this the biometric details of the person is taken and then a match is made in the database. Out of ten nearest matches demographic data of the person is entered and successively narrowed down to a perfect match. No information from the database is disclosed until the aadhaar number of the person is found.

6) Central government is scaling up the Aadhaar enabled Biometric Attendance System(AEBAS). March 1st is the deadline for all employees to get into the system.

7) Employees Provident Fund Organization(EPFO) has created a Universal Account Number(UAN) majorly relying on the aadhaar number. This UAN will not change even if the employee changes his job/employer. Namo government has decided to give back the 27,000 crore rupees accumulated in the inactive accounts of the PF offices back to its true holders. Number of claims for PF has increased in recent days and the PF offices across the country are currently overloaded with work/claims processing.

8) NPCI(National Payments Corporation of India) has piloted a new unified interface for payments linked with aadhaar number. This may use the details like the email id, mobile number and aadhaar number along with bank account number to wire money from one person to another.

This is a digital locker that can be opened using the aadhaar number/mobile phone combo. We will soon have 1GB of storage space per user to store important documents like certificates etc.

These are some major initiatives. Other pesky little uses the aadhaar is being put into are yet to emerge.
My earlier posts on aadhaar.... Poor Economics .... Giant Tsunami of aadhaar apps ..... Aadhaar Roundup-4

Sunday, January 25, 2015

A few reasons for being proud of India on Republic Day Eve


1. IEEE has proved what has been a century old suspicion in the world scientific community that the pioneer of wireless communication was Prof. Jagdish Bose and not Marconi.
2. The Indian Software Industry has grown from a mere US $ 150 million in 1991-92 to a staggering US $ 5.7 billion in 1999-2000 a growth of 35 times. No other Indian industry has performed so well against the global competition. By 2010 this number has grown 14 times to 80 billion dollars.
3. India is the world’s second largest producer of small cars. It is the largest newspaper market in the world.
4. India has the largest number of news channel in the world. It is the fastest growing telecom market in the world and has the lowest call rates on earth.

5. World’s largest electronic ID program, the aadhaar is underway in India.
6. Bollywood with about 400 films every year is the largest centre of film production in the world.
7. India is the 3rd largest producer of solar photovoltaic cells in the world. India is the world’s 4th largest wind power user.

8. India is the largest producer of milk, cashew nuts, coconuts, tea, ginger, turmeric and black pepper, in the world. It also has the world’s largest cattle population (281 million). It is the second largest producer of wheat, rice, sugar, groundnut and inland fish.
9. By volume of pills produced, the Indian pharmaceutical industry is the world’s second largest after China.
10. India’s contribution to scientific research and innovation has been constantly rising since 2000 according to a study. The number of articles published in global science journals by Indians has increased from around 17000 in 2001 to more than 27000 in 2007.
11. India has the second largest pool of Scientists and Engineers in the World.

12. India Exported a record $35 billion worth of food and food products in the year 2013-14, the third largest exporter of food. In six years we will be number one.

Poor Economics and Food Subsidy



Book Excerpts from Poor Economics by Abhijit V Banerjee and Esther Duflo. While the book talks about things like healthcare, education, entrepreneurship, micro-credit, poverty etc but i did not find much about food. An omission. I have added something to this narrative which is a revolutionary approach to solving the problem of subsidy delivery.

Every year 9 million children die before their fifth birthday. A woman in sub-Saharan Africa has a one-in-thirty chance of dying while giving birth - in the developed world, the chance is one in 5,600. There are at least twenty-five countries, most of them in sub-saharan Africa, where the average person is expected to live no more than fifty-five years. In India alone, more than 50 million school-going children cannot read a very simple text.

The problem seems too big, too intractable. Students shown images of sick and dying people out of food shortages in Malawi donated more generously when a victim chosen randomly was shown. When told that the two images they were shown of had something special in them, and that people are more likely to donate to an identifiable victim, students donations more or less became the same. We feel our contribution will be a drop in the bucket, and that the bucket probably leaks.

This book is an invitation to think of the whole set of problems which when once properly identified and understood, can be solved one at a time. The western world is roughly divided into two groups, one lead by Jeffry Sachs, advisor to the United Nations, director of the Earth institute at Columbia University in New York City. He Says poor countries are poor because they are hot, infertile, malaria infested, often landlocked; this makes it hard for them to be productive without an initial large investment to help them deal with these endemic problems. But they cannot pay for the investments precisely because they are poor- they are in what economists call a “poverty Trap”.

The other side represented by William Easterly, who battles Sachs has become one of the most influential anti-aid public figures. Dambisa Moyo has joined her voice to Easterly's and both argue that aid does more bad than good: It prevents people from searching for their own solutions, while corrupting and undermining local institutions and creating a self-perpetuating lobby of aid agencies. The best bet for poor countries is to rely on one simple idea: When markets are free and the incentives are right, people can find ways to solve their problems. They do not need handouts, from foreigners or from their own governments. They say poverty is a white man's burden which he has to live with.

Whom should we believe? Rwanda received generous aid after the genocide and prospered. Now president Paul Kagame has started to wean the country off aid. Should we wait and watch for the final word to see if there is another economic downturn or consider the good that aid has done and lay pipes from the rich countries to the poor. There is data on a couple of hundred countries in the world to show that those that received more aid did not grow faster than the rest. Perhaps the opposite can be true too and that the aid helped them avoid major disaster, and things would have been much worse without it. We simply do not know; we are just speculating on a grand scale.

In the book authors try to answer if particular instances of aid did some good or not and nothing about whether aid is good or bad per se. Authors cannot say anything about efficacy of democracy but they have something to say about whether democracy could be made more effective in rural Indonesia by changing the way it is organized on the ground and so on.

What really matters is not so much were the money comes from, but where it goes. No one really disagrees that we should help the poor when we can. A philosopher observes that most people would willingly sacrifice a $1000 suit to rescue a child seen drowning in a pond and argues that there should be no difference between that drowning child and the 9 million children who, every year, die before their fifth birthday.

Philosophers agree that poverty leads to an intolerable waste of talent. Poverty is not just a lack of money; it is not having the capability to realize one's full potential as a human being. A girl from Africa may not get the nutrition to be the world-class athlete she might have been, or the funds to start a business if she has a great idea.

She could become sick and make traveling people from the developed world sick. Had she gone to school she might have turned out to be the person who invents a cure for a disease or perhaps, she would end up as a business tycoon employing thousands of others. And even if she doesn't what could justify not giving her a chance?

Implicit in the argument is that we know how to help people in distress. Yes we do, we know we need to supply education and health care in heavy doses, how to do them while turning the outcomes to your liking is the real matter. The point is simple: Talking of the problems of the world without talking about some accessible solutions is the way to paralysis rather than progress.

The book talks about malaria affecting millions in Africa and a simple solution of a bed net and the economics of its supply and demand. It asks, What is the best way to make sure that children sleep under bed nets?

Moyo tells the story of how a bed-net supplier was ruined by a free bed-net distribution program. When free distribution stopped, there was no one to supply bed nets at any price.

To shed light on this debate we need to answer three questions.
First, if people must pay full price(or at least a significant fraction of the price) for a bed net, will they prefer to go without?
Second, if bed nets are given to them free at some subsidized price, will people use them, or will they be wasted?
Third, after getting the net at subsidized price once, will they become more or less willing to pay for the next one if the subsidies are reduced in the future?

Significance of the book for India:

Products or services such as education or healthcare or micro credit are good to have but people do not seem to value them enough to demand larger public outlays. The problem is compounded by mediocre services currently being offered by the government health and education departments. Bed net protects us from diseases and its demand may fall if mosquitoes menace is tackled. Food is something which will never go out of demand.
Regarding food in the Indian context, our farmers are in distress.
The problem is manifold. Reducing farm incomes and land holding sizes due to sub-division among family members. Increasing number of landless laborers on farms, informal tenancy agreements and lack of tenancy registration. Water shortages and other environmental factors like drought and floods. Lack of soil testing and adequate use of fertilizers in appropriate ratios. Illiteracy of farmers and inability to shift to industry or services. Regulatory restrictions and monopolies in agricultural produce marketing yards. Overemphasis on rice and wheat production as a result of increasing MSPs year after year to the detriment of other crops.
If we were to help our, what would be the best way? They need help but the way we provide help matters. Food prices are a factor of demand and supply and due to vagaries of nature Indian Food Prices experience a lot of volatility. Farmers are at the mercy of the middlemen.
How can governments incentivize the markets to pay remunerative prices to the farmers unless it intervenes. A little bit about the context in which i speak needs to be told.
India has a large organization with multi-billion dollar budget to procure, store and release grains in the market. This organization called the Food Corporation of India(FCI) controls the market. Another purpose of this organization is to maintain a buffer of grains in case of shortages and export excess grains in case of bountiful harvest.
The problem is that FCI due to operational and budgetary constraints is not able to procure from all farmers across the country. It does major portion of wheat procurement from Punjab and Haryana and rice from the southern states. So some of the farmers are at the mercy of traders.
If FCI has to work effectively its losses have to be reduced. Major losses occur due to high prices at which FCI procures grains and low prices at which it sells them. Procurement prices and prices at which FCI issues(Issue price) grains to the states are both determined by the agriculture/food ministry. States manage the public distribution system through the fair price shops and the country as a whole has nearly only 450 thousand fair price shops. While market prices for food grains are higher fair price shops sell grains at lower rates. This naturally creates incentives for diversion. In poorer states there is large scale diversion and trucks laden with grains never reach the FPS. In some Fair Price Shops(FPSs), managers cheat too.
Technocrats have looked at the problem and suggested several measures. One of them being direct benefit transfer. Direct benefit transfer involves selling grains to customers at market rates and then getting a rebate into the bank accounts equal to the difference in the subsidized price and market rates. They argue that once grains move at market rates from the FCI to the consumer there is lesser incentive for diversion.
There are several opponents of the cash transfer idea. They argue that bank branches are scarce in the villages and the villagers would lose a days pay to travel to the nearest city to withdraw the benefits. Experience has suggested that people first have to go to the bank to withdraw money and then to the shop to purchase grains. A big country like India has only about 80 thousand bank branches out of which only 38 thousand are in rural areas. Another problem is power and telecom coverage is not available in all villages, something which is needed to operate the POS and in receiving the PIN. Some opponents contend that if money is transferred to accounts of the women in the household, women abuse would rise as most villagers are alcoholic and may spend this extra money on drinking. Another argument against DBT is that villagers fingerprints are worn out due to hard work and high biometric authentication failure may lead to some amount of corruption.
Regardless of the opposition the government thinks the DBT scheme works. An elaborate IT system to gauge demand and supply in real time would be needed. Aadhaar enabled PDS(AEPDS) would be one such system where the fair price shops dispense grains and create an electronic record of the sale. Servers would then read these records and authorize banks to disburse benefits to the correct beneficiary.

Randomized trials that are used in medicine to evaluate the effectiveness of new drugs can be tailored to answer certain questions regarding the design of this system. Research by NYU Stern professor Dr. Arun Sundararajan and NEC Faculty Fellow & Doctoral Coordinator & Professor Ravi Bapna of the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management has shown that UID is reaching the Underprivileged who had no previous IDs. Government has a few alternatives before itself. If you tinker with the food chain that is vital for the economy the damage that may happen may be unacceptable. So rather than supplant the market forces by an elaborate IT driven backbone why not explore other options to maximize choices that people have in procuring food. We could for example have competition for the fair price shops and let people buy food from private shops too while getting the subsidy in their account.

The idea that finance minister Mr. Arun Jaitley hinted is that procurement from the farmers will be made at minimum support prices and the goods move through the pipeline at market rates. At the point of sales the consumer pays the market rates and gets a subsidy in his bank account. Initially this would be done in cities with higher banking coverage. Progressively the scheme may be rolled out in the villages later.
Another problem related to food is that the government incurs heavy expenditure(nearly 72 thousand crores) on fertilizer subsidy, a vital ingredient for agriculture. Urea subsidies are a major component of this. Solution suggested here too is  DBT by increasing prices of urea to market rate(stopping subsidies) and subsequently increasing the MRP to a level at par with those of our neighboring countries. The fertilizer DBT is much more difficult to implement as the subsidy is given to the fertilizer producers and farmers are purchasing them from the market. Sales are not tracked. Fertilizer companies are lobbying with the government to start DBT in fertilizers as they stand to benefit by market price sales. Currently the fertilizer companies get paid the subsidy with months and sometimes years of delay. India is a large importer of fertilizers too. Several fertilizer manufacturers had closed factories due to losses. The modi government has successfully revived majority of the factories recently.
The government has also deliberated on paying farm subsidies directly to farmers at a rate of say Rs 4000/- per hectare of land holding. This means on an average farmers are going to get nearly 10k into their accounts annually(At an average holding of 2.5 hectare per farmer) to buy the expensive fertilizers. This dole may be tied to the farmer getting his soil tested every three years by making a soil health card. The problem is more than 60% of the laborers working in the fields do not own the farm. This subsidy may be pocketed by the landlord.
The Namo Govt has concentrated on increasing efficiency and reducing leakages in PDS by digitization. e-POS machines have been installed in most of the FPSes and aadhaar has been linked with all ration cards. Aadhaar linking has reduced scope for ghost lifting. There was talk of BAPU (biometric authenticated physical uptake) which seeks to ensure real sales. The government can now think of increasing the issue price to market rates and give the states cash in lieu of subsidized grain. This makes the role of states crucial and states need to behave more responsibly.
The previous congress government had enacted a law to guarantee food to the citizens called the national food security act(NFSA). The new government has amended the act with the FSB(food security bill). In the new bill government has reduced the number of beneficiaries in from 68% of the population to 40% of the population. It believes it can target the poor effectively and cover most of them for this benefit.
Hence farmers are going to benefit by a passive income even if they do not cultivate as the government will pay them to apply fertilizers. If they cultivate they will get a high MSP. To ensure that farmers get the government stipulated MSP an IT solution can be employed at the rural level. So the question before us is really this. Is there a central Food Corporation of India really required? The farmers can sell their produce to the market and the market supplies the food grains to the fair price shops. The role of the market should not be overlooked. It transports the goods, grades them according to quality and securely stores them till such time that they are ready to be sold to the highest bidder. Where IT comes in is at the point where farmers sell the produce and the point where the people purchase the goods. E-tendering could be used at the village level to sell goods over the Internet. Then the government procures the food from the market and supplies to the fair price shops. The government just incurs the cost of the IT infrastructure, the cost of subsidy that is transferred to the end consumers and the fertilizer subsidy as a dole. Needless to say every state can have its own MSP. Everything else is left to the market forces.

I don't claim to be an expert on the subject but have made my best effort to collate information from diverse sources into a coherent story.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

PK and Krish3 - their relevance to science and religion



A movie when it grosses the highest box office collections in any industry deserves to be discussed threadbare. The movie plays on the emotions of people and introduces humans to an alien civilization much advanced than our own. It questions our beliefs. It has a message of indo-pak brotherhood. It hits out against hypocrisy and strikes a chord making people think about the definition of religion.
Indian movies more often than not have depicted aliens as friends of our civilization as against the paranoid Americans. In this movie excepting minor differences in appearance an alien falls in love with a human disregarding genetic differences/compatibility. The hero descends to the earth naked. In the humorous last scene several males descend to earth looking for females to marry making you wonder whether competition for females was less on earth that we have aliens with supernatural powers to compete with. Why is there a depiction of a horny alien civilization esp at places where women are in short supply? Why don't naked alien females descend and solve some of our problems.(quip)
The hero has child like behavior and questions everything. He comes in contact with a sex worker and guess what(the weakest link in the movie and the most unscientific) in an unbelievable way downloads all the memory from her into himself. That there can be flying saucers riding which aliens come to earth is more palatable. This USB like download of past experiences is an example of fantastic Indian imagination. Something similar was spoken by the prime minister in the science congress.
People apply various meanings to existing things and science is a misunderstood term here. So you have science of religion too.
Here is a sequence of dialogues from the movie Krishh 3:

Wah papa yeh sab kya hai... Mere saalon ki mehnath Ek koshish kyon ki dhoop zindagi deti hai Light gives life... aur mujhe lagta hai ki Maine finally aayinon ke zariye light ki energy ko reflect karke use multipy karneka perfect combination bana liya hai. Kudrath mein bhi aisa magical combination maujoodh hai par ham log use dekh nahin paathe isliye mera yeh khaas pen jo actually ek electronic device hai is pen ke aas paas kahin bhi aisa magical combination ho toh yeh acivate ho jayega beep karne lagega aur phir saari kiranon ko samet ke unhe multiply karega aur ek subject pe daale ga aur phir ham dekh sakenge ki kaise dhoop zindagi deti hai.
Hard to digest indeed.
So with bollywood movies performing last rites of science and poking fun of religion one is left to wonder where people are being led to. Atheism? While western world is taking support of science and the developing world religion our movies are poking fun of both.