Sunday, May 31, 2009
Minister Damages Island's Reputation
Sithanen vs. Sithanen
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Good to Extend, Better to Optimise
Friday, May 29, 2009
Why Some Mauritian Firms May Go Under
- Bosses have been taking out too much money via excessive salaries and other perks such as gas-guzzling limousines
- Dividend policies are or have been at unsustainable levels
- Products are not competitive enough or haven't changed for ages
- Return on invested capital they are seeking are outlandish for the industry they are in
The Aid Industrialists And Their Bastards
Economic and political elites readily embrace the toxic policies advocated as the bubbles created boost wealth draining. We have here all the elements of thriving crony capitalism. Now, imagine the impact of opening a World Bank office to drive domestic policies. There's a handful of winners, including apparatchiks and useful idiots, but plenty of casualties.
Simon Johnson, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management and former chief economist at the IMF, provides us with the modus operandi of the "winning formula" in The Quiet Coup. Unmissable.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Ransom Established At Rs357,153
Vishnu Was Quite Lucky
1983 was also the 6th anniversary of the implementation of free education so a larger than usual number, for that period at least, of our youngsters with a higher human capital content were getting ready to hit the job market. Population growth was also well under check -- something Mr. Lutchmeenaraidoo had not a great deal to do with.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
The British Investor is Not Going To Singapore
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Economic Kidnapping
- They were asking workers to give up this year's compensation so as to save their jobs.
- They were also asking for taxpayers' money so that they don't sack people. But they offer no guarantees that they will not lay off anybody even after receiving our money.
- A few had even the indecency of asking for public funds even though they were doing alright. They wanted these handouts just in case they might get into trouble. Which gives you a hint of their entrepreneurial ability.
Monday, May 25, 2009
National Poverty Council
- Create a lot of inflation as soon as possible
- Add three controversial criteria so that the disconnect between increases in the cost of living and salary compensation is as large as possible
- Keep inflation into double digits or high enough for as long as possible
Why the IRS Party Could Be Over
Smells Like Rotten Tomatoes
"Un rapport intitulé "Accaparement des terres ou opportunité de développement?" appelle à la consultation des populations menacées et à une meilleure prise en compte de leurs intérêts dans les transactions. Il souligne un manque de transparence constant dans les processus de décision et les circuits d'investissement. De quoi alimenter les craintes de corruption ou de transactions contraires à l' intérêt public."
Je vous invite à reporter l'avertissement sur Dodoland avec ses IRS, RES, Tianli, etc. et à méditer sur leur impact tout en intégrant l'étroitesse du territoire et les inégalités criantes.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Thursday, May 21, 2009
How to Calculate Average Growth Rates
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
A Flawed View of Competitiveness
"The most intuitive definition of competitiveness is a country’s share of world markets for its products. It also underpins policies intended to provide subsidies, hold down local wages and devalue the nation’s currency, all aimed at expanding exports. In fact, it is still often said that lower wages or devaluation “make a nation more competitive".
Unfortunately, this intuitive view of competitiveness is deeply flawed, and acting on it works against national economic progress. The need for low wages reveals a lack of competitiveness, and holds down prosperity. Subsidies drain national income and bias choices away from the most productive use of the nation’s resources.
Devaluation results in a collective national pay cut by discounting the products and services sold in world markets while raising the cost of the goods and services purchased from abroad. Exports based on low wages or a cheap currency, then, do not support an attractive standard of living."
Monday, May 18, 2009
Why the Poor and the Middle-class Will Not Rebound When the Recession Ends
Another Non-event
Sunday, May 17, 2009
The Importance of Sharing
Did We Need One in the First Place?
Guarantees in Politics
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Depreciating Our Way to Chaos
Talking' Bout a Revolution
Don't forget: our media culture failed to serve the public interest by missing (with a few honourable exceptions) the two biggest stories of our time: the run-up to the Iraq war and the financial meltdown. We've had far too many autopsies and not enough biopsies. And online news is well suited to obsessively follow a story until it breaks through the static. We need to also remind ourselves that the mission of journalism has always been truth-seeking not, as it has often become, striking some fictitious balance between two sides.
As things stand, it is fair to say that the "two biggest stories of our time", that is "Mauritian miracle" and "reform", have failed media scrutiny too. But reality rarely fails to bite deception.
What's the next verse Tracy?
... people gonna rise up
And get their share
... people gonna rise up
And take what's theirs
Monday, May 11, 2009
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Let the People Speak
How to Make the Stimulus Package Less Opaque
- All the names of the beneficiaries should be published as well as a snapshot of their financials (including past profits and gross margin, dividend policy, top management's salaries and other perks over a five year period)
- Summary of the reasons why taxpayers' money was dished out to them
- The names and resumes of the independent financial analysts involved should be made public
- The parameters that are going to be monitored have to be available and the circumstances under which the state will pull out
- The government auditor should evaluate the program on a monthly basis and its report should be placed on the net
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Failed By Their Own Standards
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Monday, May 4, 2009
La république monarchique
"La presse mauricienne est libre, mais elle est aussi victime d'autocensure de la part de ses journalistes. On n’entend pas assez la voix du peuple, les journaux ne reflètent pas les réalités mauriciennes. Et cela doit changer…"
D'autre part, à la question "Pourquoi ne prenez-vous pas la parole plus souvent sous forme d'opinion ?", le philosophe Michel Serres, professeur à Stanford University, répond "La réponse est double : on ne prend la parole aujourd'hui que si on est invité à la prendre. Posez donc la question à ceux qui invitent à prendre la parole".
Vous avez dit "pensée unique"?