- Biography
- Books
- Commentary
- Newspapers
- Asian Age
- Bloomberg Quint
- Business Line
- Business Standard
- Dainik Bhaskar (Hindi)
- Divya Gujarati
- Dainik Jagran (Hindi)
- Divya Marathi
- Divya Bhaskar
- Economic Times
- Eenadu (Telugu)
- Financial Times
- Hindustan Times
- livemint
- Lokmat, Marathi
- New York Times
- Prajavani (Kannada)
- Tamil Hindu
- The Hindu
- The Indian EXPRESS
- Times of India
- Tribune
- Wall Street Journal
- Essays
- Interviews
- Magazines
- Essays
- Scroll.in
- Newspapers
- Speaking
- Videos
- Reviews
- Contact
दैनिक भास्कर मे जून 2008 से जुलाई 2009 तक प्रकाशित लेख| September 1, 2009 - 05:10गुरचरण दास के लेख नियमित रूप से अंग्रेजी, हिंदी, मराठी, तेलगू एवं मलयालम भाषाओं के अखबारों मे प्रकाशित होते हैं। हिंदी अखबार दैनिक भास्कर मे जून 2008 से जुलाई 2009 के मध्य प्रकाशित उनके लेख पढने के लिये यह फाईल [PDF Version - 493 KB] डाउनलोड करें। |
Adam Smith's Dharma| August 21, 2009 - 22:21In January this year, President Sarkozy of France, former Prime Minister Tony Blair of England, and the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, kicked off a debate in Paris on the nature and the future of capitalism. It was in response to the global economic crisis. This article--my inaugural column for the Times on Saturday--is a contribution to this debate. The idea that an ancient Indian epic might offer insight into capitalism's nature, on the face of it, appears bizarre. |
An old tale of two modern brothers| August 18, 2009 - 21:09Once upon a time there was an ambitious young man named Mukesh Ambani who invested Rs 38,000 crores to look for gas, deep on the ocean's floor off the turbulent coast of Andhra Pradesh. Some called him mad. If ONGC, the government exploration company, did not find anything after wasting thousands of crores of taxpayer's money for decades, how could he risk his and his shareholder's money in this reckless manner? What if nothing was found? |
Scenes from a Punjabi Childhood| July 22, 2009 - 00:04(From Remembered Childhood, Edited by Malavika Karlekar & Rudrangshu Mukherjee, Oxford University Press, 2010.) It was around four 'o clock in the afternoon that my grandfather used to come home from the courts. We would eagerly await his arrival since he always brought home fresh sweets from the Bengali hunchback's shop. As he approached the wooden gate of the house he would clear his throat, and this was a signal of sorts. His daughter- in- law would quickly cover her head; my grandmother would go to the kitchen and put water on for tea; we, his grandchildren, knew that it was the last round of dice in our afternoon game of Pachisi before the scores were tallied. This family routine persisted right through the 1940s. |
Like honeybees collecting nectar| July 10, 2009 - 01:44Ever since 1991 we have come to expect a vision of the economy's future in the Budget speech of the Finance Minister. This did not happen on July 6, 2009. The day before, the Economic Survey had raised the hopes of real reform. Those hopes were dashed. Pranab Mukherjee spoke like an accountant, not a statesman, and the stock market fell by almost a thousand points. The new government lost an opportunity to spell out its program and win over domestic and foreign investors. |
To thine own self be true| June 28, 2009 - 00:11When Polonius said in Hamlet, 'to thine own self be true', he was not thinking of Part I of the UPA government's forthcoming Budget. Polonius was saying that integrity and success lie in being true to oneself. This Budget is expected to announce a massive give-away of rice and wheat at Rs 3/- per kilo, and the scheme is likely to fail because it fails Polonius' test. Eighteen years of slow, incremental economic reforms have fashioned a certain kind of nation which was captured brilliantly in the film, 'Slumdog Millionaire'. If the movie caught the character of the nation's poor, the Indian Premier League (IPL) of cricket mirrors it for the middle class. The character quite simply is of a vibrant and energetic private sector that is hemmed in by an arid eco-system of weak governance. As if to underline this, our bureaucracy has recently been rated the worst in Asia in a survey of twelve countries. |
Why the future belongs to India| May 11, 2009 - 05:29
In preparing for a much publicised debate in London on the motion 'The future belongs to India, not China', I was reminded of a conversation with my mother. She had asked, what is the difference between China growing at a rate of 10% and India at 8%? I replied that the difference was, indeed, very significant. If we were to grow at 10% we could save twenty years. This is almost a generation. We could lift a whole generation into the middle class twenty years sooner. She thought for a while and then said gently, 'we have waited 3000 years for this moment. Why don't we wait another twenty and do it the Indian way?' |
The Dharma of Capitalism| April 21, 2009 - 21:04The most damaging fallout from this economic crisis may well be a loss of trust in the democratic capitalist system, especially if those who are unemployed and suffering begin to believe that "anything goes" in an unfair world. In the rush to rewrite the rules of the game, policy makers might consider the message of dharma from Indian philosophy and literature, which offers a more nuanced answer to moral failure and the ethics of capitalism. |
Young India, old politicians| April 13, 2009 - 01:24Not a single politician has explained to us during this election campaign why India has risen to become the world's second fastest growing economy. It did not happen because our leaders gave cheap rice, reservations, employment guarantee schemes, loan waivers, or anything else on the mind of our political class. Hence, a suspicion has grown that our country may be rising despite its politicians and the economy grows at night when the government is asleep. The best that our leaders have done since 1991 is to gradually get out of the people's way.More... |
Dharma fails on Wall Street| March 16, 2009 - 02:09'Oh, so you are one of them!' is how someone greeted my nephew, who is embarrassed to tell people that he is an investment banker. 'I'd rather say that I run a brothel,' he says. 'At least, that's a business people understand.' Bankers, having brought the world economy to its knees, have become pariahs overnight and a target of people's rage. International Labour Organization warns that global unemployment could hit a staggering 50 million. A typical knee jerk reaction is call it 'greed' but that is not helpful. We have always known that if envy is a sin of socialism, greed is a failing of capitalism. Much has been written of this crisis but not enough about its moral quality. Do free markets inherently corrode character? |