Fw: Why Indians have succeeded in countries ruled by whites but failed in their own?

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Arkay Enpee

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Sep 9, 2011, 7:39:49 AM9/9/11
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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: jay thakrar <jahe...@hotmail.co.uk>
Sent: Fri, 9 September, 2011 5:54:33 AM
Subject: FW: Why Indians have succeeded in countries ruled by whites but failed in their own?


 




 

 
 
 
 
 
INTERESTING ARTICLE TO READ.
 




 
 

 




> Subject: Interesting analysis: Why Indians have succeeded in
> countries ruled by whites but failed in their own?
>
> In this last Swami-nomics of the millennium, I would like to sum up
> our performance in the 20th century in one sentence: Indians have
> succeeded in countries ruled by whites, but failed in their own.
>
> This outcome would have astonished leaders of our independence
> movement. They declared, Indians were kept down by white rule and
> could flourish only under self-rule. This seemed self-evident. The
> harsh reality today is that Indians are succeeding brilliantly in
> countries ruled by whites, but failing in India. They are flourishing
> in the USA and Britain.
>
> But those that stay in India are pulled down by an outrageous system
> that fails to reward merit or talent, fails to allow people and
> businesses to grow, and keeps real power with netas, babus, and
> assorted manipulators. Once Indians go to white-ruled countries, they
> soar and conquer summits once occupied only by whites.
>
> Rono Dutta has become head of United Airlines, the biggest airline
> in the world. Had he stayed in India, he would have no chance in
> Indian Airlines. Even if the top job there was given to him by some
> godfather, a myriad netas, babus and trade unionists would have
> ensured that he could never run it like United Airlines.
>
> Rana Talwar has become head of Standard Chartered Bank Plc, one of
> the biggest multinational banks in Britain, while still in his 40s.
> Had he been in India, he would perhaps be a local manager in the State
> Bank, taking orders from babus to give loans to politically favored
> clients.

>
> Rajat Gupta is head of Mckinsey, the biggest management consultancy
> firm in the world. He now advises the biggest multinationals on how to
> run their business. Had he remained in India he would probably be
> taking orders from some sethji with no qualification save that of
> being born in a rich family.

>
> Lakhsmi Mittal has become the biggest steel baron in the world, with
> steel plants in the US, Kazakhstan, Germany, Mexico, Trinidad and
> Indonesia. India's socialist policies reserved the domestic steel
> industry for the public sector. So Lakhsmi Mittal went to Indonesia
> to run his family's first steel plant t here. Once freed from the
> shackles of India, he conquered the world.

>
> Subhash Chandra of Zee TV has become a global media king, one of the
> few to beat Rupert Murdoch. He could never have risen had he been
> limited to India, which decreed a TV monopoly for Doordarshan. But
> technology came to his aid: satellite TV made it possible for him to
> target India from Hong Kong. Once he escaped Indian rules and soil,
> he soared.
>
> You may not have heard of 48-year old Gururaj Deshpande. His
> communications company, Sycamore, is currently valued by the US stock
> market at over $30 billion, making him perhaps one of the richest
> Indians in the world. Had he remained in India, he would probably be
> a babu in the Department of Telecommunications
.
>
> Arun Netravali has become president of Bell Labs, one of the biggest
> research and development centers in the world with 30,000 inventions
> and several Nobel Prizes to its credit. Had he been in India, he
> would probably be struggling in the middle cadre of Indian Telephone
> Industries. Silicon Valley alone contains over one lac Indian
> millionaires.
>
> Sabeer Bhatia invented Hotmail and sold it to Microsoft for $400
> million. Victor Menezes is number two in Citibank, Shailesh Mehta is
> CEO of Providian, a top US financial services company. Also at or
> near the top are Rakesh Gangwal of US Air, Jamshed Wadia of Arthur
> Andersen, and Aman Mehta of Hong Kong & amp; Shanghai Banking Corp.
>
> In Washington DC, the Indian CEO High Tech Council has no less than
> 200 members, all high tech-chiefs. While Indians have soared, India
> has stagnated. At independence India was the most advanced of all
> colonies, with the best prospects.
>
> Today with a GNP per head of $370, it occupies a lowly 177th
> position among 209 countries of the world. But poverty is by no means
> the only or main problem. India ranks near the bottom in the UNDP's
> Human Development Index, but high up in Transparency International's
> Corruption Index.
>
> The neta-babu raj brought in by socialist policies is only one
> reason for India's failure. The more sordid reason is the rule-based
> society we inherited from the British Raj is today in tatters.
> Instead money, muscle and influence matter most.
>
> At independence we were justly proud of our politicians. Today we
> regard them as scoundrels and criminals. They have created a jungle
> of laws in the holy name of socialism, and used these to line their
> pockets and create patronage networks. No influential crook suffers.
> They flourish unhindered because they have political links.
>
> The sons of police officers believe they have a license to rape and
> kill (ask the Mattoo family). Talent cannot take you far amidst such
> rank misgovernance. We are reverting to our ancient feudal system
> where no rules applied to the powerful. The British Raj brought in
> abstract concepts of justice for all, equality before the law. These
> were maintained in the early years of independence. But fifty years
> later, citizens wail that India is a lawless land where no rules are
> obeyed.
>
> I have heard of an IAS probationer at the Mussorie training academy
> pointing out that in India before the British came, making money and
> distributing favors to relatives was not considered a perversion of
> power, it was the very rationale of power.
>
> A feudal official had a duty to enrich his family and caste. Then
> the British came and imposed a new ethical code on officials. But, he
> asked, why should we continue to choose British customs over desi ones
> now that we were independent?
>
> The lack of transparent rules, properly enforced, is a major reason
> why talented Indians cannot rise in India. A second reason is the
> neta-babu raj, which remains intact despite supposed liberalization.
> But once talented Indians go to rule-based societies in the west, they
> take off. In those societies all people play by the same rules, all
> have freedom to innovate without being strangled by regulations.
>
> This, then, is why Indians succeed in countries ruled by whites, and
> fail in their own. It is the saddest story of the century.
>
> Ravi Shankar Jayaram
> Research associate
> Council on Hemispheric Affairs
> The Hague
>
> PS: THIS, BELIEVE YOU ME, IS JUST 1/10TH OF the INDIANS SUCCESS.
>
>
>
>
>
> Harry.
 
 
 


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