Monday, December 29, 2008

Poverty and World Bank

Every morning we are greeted with grim news. Economic meltdown, stock slump, housing slump, bear hugs, climate concerns, terrorist attacks, inhibited growth etc. While the rich has lost billions collectively and the poor have nothing to lose as they had nothing in the first place, middle class is bearing most of the brunt. Some of them on the left of the balance have been pushed back to being poor once again.

As the World talks about stimulus packages and rescue efforts and investor confidences, the actually affected parties are really not being cared about. The developing and poor countries are still sufffering with health hazards, poverty, hunger and what not. While all capital banks have done bad innovations to screw middle class, the so-called responsible institutions like IMF, World Bank have done NO innovation whatsoever in all these years for poverty eradication.

Well, how can they? After all, people who sit in cosy Washington offices, sipping Starbucks and watching the Snow Christmas with double coats can hardly relate to hunger driven, water starved, naked children suffering extreme weathers and succumbing to death.

The World Bank is not a sacred organization of any sort. It has been ridden with corruption, scandals, bad leadership, heavy op-burden, excessive employee perks, aimless units amongst others. The institution seeks to serve its interests more than anyone else's. It boasts of over a $1b op-expense every year. It's employees have every benefit/perk - first class travels, tax free salaries, seven-star accomodations, retirement benefits, home-country-travel/education/parking and several other allowances, lifetime employment guarantees, periodic vacations, work from home options for years and what not! And all this under the cover of working towards elimination of poverty!!!

The only reason this institution is even surviving in spite of becoming irrelevant and incompetent is because it is protected by top capitalist nations to push their agenda into developing and poor nations.

The past Presidents of World Bank have spent all their time to fight internal corruption. A proper audit of World Bank would definitely throw people off their seats. Given all this arrogant & complacent behavior, the World Bank cannot even drive poverty out of the beggars in front of their offices, leave alone the countless billions in Africa and poor nations.

As 2009 dawns, Zoellick must make one promise - the bottom of his heart. If he can stop all the useless internal expenses his organization generates, if he can prevent internal corruption, if he can downsize his organization to ensure only the right people remain staffed - that would be the most sincere effort anyone can take to help people live, fight the hunger and wake up everyday with some hope. After all, if profit making companies are forced to downsize, cut costs and make efficient operations, this international burden called World Bank should do something on its part.

(The above is an excerpt from my paper. All the views here are personal.)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

World Bank & Satyam

I had a post here on this subject. However after a friend / former colleague and some well wishers at work advised me to take the post out, I have respected their advise and taken it out. Sorry for the disappointment.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Scam + Shame => Satyam!!!

Eight years after Sify (the Internet company of Satyam Computers- sold off a few years back) bought the Indiaworld.Com channels in a whopping Rs. 499 crore cash deal, the promoters and management of Satyam Computers have indulged in their next tomfoolery again. By agreeing to take stakes in Maytas properties and Maytas Infra, both of which are controlled by the same family, the Raju's, Satyam Management & more importantly the board have engaged in the action that makes investors feel stupid.

It is even inconceivable that Raju's and their henchmen thought this deal would go along. How is it possible that a publicly listed company, buys the shares of another, without discussing with the investors and where there is a direct conflict of interest? A look at the valuation for Maytas and any novice would find the ridiculous numbers. The deal would make Satyam a net debt company!! The synergies are not very compelling either. What is the value proposition? "We will build offices, provide infrastructure and software"? The promoters and the management should be kicked for their actions and the board must be summarily fired and legal action needs to be taken for such a impudent move to approve this acquisition.

The bigger problem is that companies like Satyam do lot of hedging, sit on a pile of cash citing risk management during turbulent times. Now all they have done is to engage in most unethical, shameful activities that just makes their pockets bigger, short-changes the investors and puts India Inc. to shame. Satyam is sitting on a Rs. 8000 crore pile. A few days back it was reported by 'analysts' that Satyam would be the safest company to tide over the meltdown storm. But Captain Raju and his crew have ensured that they dont mind sinking the ship if it will mean profits to the family.

This is not expected of a person like Raju, who is hailed as a visionary and has got a number of awards like Businessman of the year and Entrepreneur of the year from E&Y, Dataquest etc. Satyam has now reversed the bid, but investors, clients and associates will start to wonder seriously about the vision of the management and if they have the skills and ethics to lead them forward.

It is time that we form a United Shareholders of India, similar to the one created by Carl Icahn in US and fight for minority shareholder rights.

Disclosure: The author is an investor in Satyam Computers and also was a long term associate of the company in a middle level leadership position.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Nationalized Banks - this is your time

It is a bank for the retired people who have nothing else to do but go wait there all day.

It is a lousy, government organization. It takes hours to get anything done there.

People come, eat lunch, chat, watch TV(!), take breaks & naps and go home. They are least bother about customer service.
While the above applies to any government controlled company in India, I am specifically talking about nationalized banks - like State Bank of India or Canara Bank. You can find the staff highly irritating, very bureaucratic, zero level of customer service, dont-care attitudes and everything that you can complain of. If this were any private company in any sector, the shutters would have been down, the management and staff would have been stoned. But being a nationalized bank, armed with very powerful unions the staff could care less about what management plans or customers think.

How else can you explain the fact that they didnt bother to bring in ATMs and Credit cards into Indian soil for decades until private banks and foriegn banks pushed for it. As much as people blame ICICI for what it has done, but for ICICI, none of the Indian nationalized banks would have even thought about improving customer service. Today a regular savings account in SBI comes with debit card, ATM accesses, Internet Banking and what not !!..

And I think there will be a no better oppurtune moment than now for the nationalized banks to win the faith & love of public. Customers who moved away from these nationalized banks, corporate youth who hate to stand in tellers queues for hours together and NRIs who want to be in control of their money have all now started to pull out their money from private banks like ICICI and are putting them into SBI & Canara & Indian banks. Never before has such a surge of new account openings taken place.

If SBI & others think that this is because of the great customer service that they have or attractive deposits that they offer, they are highly mistaken and awfully arrogant. People move the money into SBI because they think their deposits are insured by the Government of India. And that SBI wont fold and/or run away with their money. If & when the economy stabilizes and there is growth path again, it will be a matter of time the customers find out that making investment decisions with money stuck in a SBI safe is like waiting for a judgement in a Indian court. Customers will take the money and run. And SBI will find itself running to Finance ministry to issue a depositor confidence boosting statement.

So this is the right time for the nationalized banks to improve their service & image. Use all the incoming money to ensure that your operations are made better; hiring is better; services are good; you are more responsive to customer. Ensure that your customer will stay with you because he/she loves your service. Not because they are stuck with you. If SBI & other nationalized banks choose to sleep now and act as if they are kings of Indian banking system, it is a matter of time before mergers happen within them or they get divested and eventually bought out or closed. I know that the socialist circles of India will never let any of this happens, no matter how bad these banks perform, but there is something called as competitive sustainability and without efficiency improvements and innovations, no institution can survive- not even the government itself.

(As a side note, I walked into the newly opened SBI Kondapur @ Hyderabad the other day. It was 11:00 AM. An young chap in his mid twenties sat in one of the teller windows, reading a local newspaper, not bothering to answer the queries customers were asking him. I wonder whether they do a culture fit and actually try and hire the laziest irriating bums to work in these places!)

Thursday, November 27, 2008

The IMF's usual dance

The IMF has done it yet again. Pakistan, not being able to gain support from former friends like US, China and not even from their brethren Saudi Arabia, has finally & reluctantly approached the IMF and got a $7+b bailout.

And the IMF as usual has attached its strings to the bailout and imposed all standard conditions to bring inflation down, even at the cost of development faltering. This is not the first or last time IMF has undermined the democracy of the nation it tries to support.

And yet, after all the recession, sub prime, economic meltdown, G-20, developed economies faltering and all that, there is ONE institution which will never mend its ways - the IMF. Isnt it just about time they wake up?

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Rescuing Big Three of Detroit

Off late, the MoTown three have been spending money in pursuit of more money. If we to follow the Op-Eds of NYT or other leading dailies, we can see everyone from Michigan senators to right wing Nobel prize winning economist talk about why Detroit need to be rescued. And why this has to be done in spite of the fact that there has been no innovation, careless spending, wrong investments and arrogant/extravagant attitudes of the auto companies. We have been threatened that closure of even one of the auto companies, will start a downward spiral, bring all three down, bring their suppliers down followed by dumping of all their existing unsold cars - causing a further $400b loss. So bankrutcy is not an anwer because it will ultimately lead to liquidaiton unlike in airline sector.

This is all true. And yes. I am dead against rescuing the Detroit guys. After all, their irresponsibility, lack of care for climate change, arrogance in spending - even after Honda & Toyota started dominating - is simply mind boggling. But let me keep my prejudice aside for a moment. After all, these car companies were just serving American dream. It is not that they didnt innovate, but there werent that smart. And I believe that the bailout package given to them is not to just continue with their status quo, but to reorganize and re-energize their operations. If the Fed is willing to rescue Bankers with hundreds of billions of dollars, a $25b bailout for GM/Ford/Chrysler is not that bad at all, if it could save employment.

The bailout could come with very strict terms and in phases. Chrysler need to be sold to GM. And GM has to stop producing all the various models which the company itself is probably not aware of. Ford needs to given an ultimatum to return to profitability within a year or massive restructuring and downsizing by 50%.

Yes, socializing losses is harmful. But the car companies are more of victims right now as their death has been hastened, though it was imminent. It is not the time to treat them different from the bad Bankers, who have brought about this meltdown with unnecessary innovation.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Will the IIMs please stand up

If one were to look abroad, most of the macroeconomic think tank is populated by Professors from various Universities. This is more true in the case of US. Harvard, Columbia (where Prof. Sachs sits), Princeton (home of Prof. Krugman), Michigan (Prof. Prahalad), Chicago (Prof. Rajan) and several top notch Universities house these think tanks, draw from the wealth of their experience and are ready to provide advise to various institutions including Fed and Treasury and even to the Office of the President on economic affairs. While the MBAs from these schools do make millions and at some point contribute to the meltdown directly or otherwise, the teachers do stand up to provide advise and support or at least make their voices heard.

In India, we have the IIMs - quasi-government controlled age old institutions. The IIMs, particularly A, B & C are guilty of identifying some of the smartest brains in India, arm them with business skills and help fast track their careers by providing opportunities via placement cells and excellent pay packets running to crores of rupees. All this for a paltry fee. Obviously the immediate RoI for someone who walks into IIMs is a gazillion times more than doing a similar course in US Universities. And yeah, these smart IIM grads have grown to greater heights and as said before contributed one way or other to meltdown.

But contrary to US, where are the IIM professors advising the nation at the time of the need? These are guys who educate the smart brains of the country. Where are their opinions? Why is it that they make a rare apperance in Economic Times or any other leading public daily advising or giving opinions to Indian government and Indian citizens. Is the government controlling their views too? Are they not being allowed to express opinions through blogs & columns? Does the IIM institution prevent its staff from talking about real world problems? IIMs continue to make news only regarding CAT, placements/internships, director appointments or OBC quotas.

While I do understand that this comparison comes with its own bunch of flaws, the core question of why are the IIM Professors absent in a Indian think tank still remains. Come on IIMs, you have a duty to this nation. We have serious problems and we need smarter and serious people to solve them.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Savings wont save us!

Given today's grim scenario, one thing that definitely wont save us is savings!. When economy is on a downward spiral, companies stop producing, stop making profits, start firing people.. Now people stop spending, that leads to lower demand and companies stop producing ... this is the vicious circle. We have been through this in an earlier post.

Now what governments need to do, as advocated by the reinstated master Keynes is to put money in people's pockets. This is to ensure that people spend more. No matter how the government does it - by slashing interest rates, by creating new projects (read jobs), by cutting sales taxes - success will come only when that money is being spent by public. Spending will create demand that will boost supply, increase profits, create jobs and go on..

So if we start tightening our purse strings to spend on a rainy day, well.. this IS the rainy day. As governments start doing their job to support the falling economy, public has to do its part by spending enough. This is not a time to listen to old middle-class tales of how savings will save us eventually - it is in fact the right opposite. It is time to break piggy banks and buy that stuff you have always wanted. Buy a house, dress, stocks, chocolates, gift items, jewelery. Tour the nation. Stay/Eat in hotels. USE THE MONEY. Our recovery is dependent on our spending no matter what the government does or intends to do.

Maybe the FM should tax people who save more and boost spending. Lets spend and save the economy!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Bullish Market!

And so why should I talk about Bullish market when we pass Life in the time of Bears.

I am referring to the Indian IT Service companies. Almost all of them - TCS, Wipro, Infosys, Satyam, CTS, HCL and even smaller players like MindTree, Patni are all sitting on excess reserves of cash. A quick glance would tell you that the range is between $250m - $2b!! This is the time to strategize, target and buy over troubled companies in Europe or US so that the toplines can be impacted positively as the meltdown melts down.

Almost all companies are now gung-ho for M&As. However the aggressive purchases could well determine who will be in the forefront for next 5 to 7 years. This is an opportunity in a platter.

I have been against the Indian IT Service companies sitting on cash pile, neither utilizing it on investments nor returning it to shareholders. But now these companies are offered with a golden opportunity to make hay with this cash pile. And those companies which keep sitting on the pile without realising value for it, might as well be clear that they would be left behind.

Buy, buy, buy!! It is bullish market to buy IT Service companies in EU/US!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Predictions and Investment Analysts

Economists are much better. They don't claim to predict future. They study different scenarios, conjure interesting theories and see if they can help the world grow.

Investment analysts on the other hand - no one knows what they do. They have complicated formulas, jazzy excel spreadsheets, floating tickers and they issue some advise. Most often arbitrarily is my guess.

Look at this Merrill Lynch statement. We all know that the markets are down and future is uncertain. So what is so great about ML making a comment about a gloomy future?

Why is that these overpaid highly greedy super egoistic investment analysts not able to predict the bubble bursting? Or the fact that their loans and their own instruments will go under?

Why is that Merill, which is predicting grave market scenario for next 12 months, not able to predict that it itself was en route to its grave?

Stop it Merill. You got Lynched.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

What should Microsoft/Yahoo! do?

Now that Yahoo's irrelevance in the internet industry is more or less certain, Jerry Yang has come back asking Microsoft to buy his company out. Yahoo!'s shares are at $13 range currently. Microsoft's original bid was $33/share and Jerry didn't want to take it. After Google has walked away from the advertising deal, Yahoo!'s board is now currently left with no option but to seek Microsoft's help by buying them out.

What should Microsoft do? Microsoft itself is on the verge of irrelevance in Internet industry. Except for the infamous browser called Internet Explorer, anything that Microsoft has done (copied from someone) hasn't been even a moderate success. Acquisitions like Hotmail and borrowed ideas on cloud computing and other developments have kept Microsoft afloat in the web world. If Microsoft were to acquire Yahoo! eying Search consolidation, it might not be such a bad decision after all. However, considering that Google is well over 65% of the market today, an acquisition on its own will not help Microsoft in any way. First the merged company will need to trim itself and leverage the power of each of the products it owns. And knowing Microsoft, the big bully might find it tough to change its bad habits of acquiring something, making changes to that successful system so that it becomes unusable and buggy.

What should Yahoo! do? The best course of action is to add Icahn to its board so that a decent negotiation can take place with Microsoft. Next, remove ineffective board members without any severance pay. Third, really focus on getting the maximum value for Yahoo! shareholders instead of just focusing on packages for top management and board.

Too sad to see you go Yahoo!. The end could have been better.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The WEMF - Worldwide Emerging Markets Fund

2008 is making history of all sorts, the most radical one being that America, where racism is still in living memory, has chosen Afro-American Barack Obama to lead her for the next 4 years. 2008 is probably when the US will start standing to the left of even former USSR. And 2008 is probably when, US should officially shed its status as the leading economic superpower and dollar stops from being the lone international currency.

Maybe 2008 is when we hold another Bretton Woods conference, only that it wouldn't happen at Bretton Woods, but this time it will be within the borders of East Asia excluding Japan. Maybe 2008 is where we will get to replace the Washington consensus with a New Delhi consensus. And for all the cynical folks, we are not talking about a typical socialistic or communist package out there.

The reality is that the American dream, has ended; Informally founded at Regan era, continuing its spree under Clinton, going to peak during the Bush years , the dream has run its course and has shaken people awake as Obama prepares to enter office. It is as if all of us have slept for last 20 years and we are getting back to where we originally were. During this sleep, many have become wealthier, spent quite a lot and finally are back to being poor.

And hence maybe we need to reinvent the international institutions at stake here, primarily the International Monetary Fund. It is about time that we hold a Chindia conference somewhere between Beijing and New Delhi, declare that the IMF in its current shape and form is highly irrelevant and propose formation of a WEMF - the worldwide emerging markets fund.
  • This fund is where real emerging markets will have more voting shares than the so-called leading economic superpowers.
  • This fund will respect democracies of nations to which it lends/advises.
  • This fund will not force liberalization down the throats of countries that simply dont lack the capacity to withstand such a open economy.
  • This fund will not stress creditor interest alone.
  • This fund will have a genuine interest to pull people out of poverty and not act on the interests of giant free market capitalist countries.
Professor Jeffrey Sachs rightly says "Low taxes and deregulation produced a consumer binge that felt good while it lasted, but also produced vast income inequality, large underclass, heavy foreign borrowing, neglect of environment and infrastructure and now a huge financial mess. The time has come for a new economic strategy- in essence a New Deal".

And so let us work towards this New Deal.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Capitalism & Socialism - Lecture Series - Part V - Notes

Today's post is about the infamous liquidity-trap. When I gave the lecture, this part was very well discussed with lots of interesting questions around this subject. If you are a fan of Prof. Krugman, you dont have to necessarily continue reading this post, as he has been too vocal about this for the past many months. 

But before stepping into the trap, let us look at one important factor - savings. Generally savings is a virtue and people are encouraged to save more. If there were no government intervention in the world (a free market capitalist dream), then this is what would happen - consumers will save more, which means they will spend less. This will automatically result in lower production of goods which reduces efficiency as well as workforce numbers and profits for companies. As a result, salaries will get lower for consumers and in turn, because of this, consumers will start saving even more. This will only detoriorate the situation further, giving rise to a vicious circle. 

However in reality, there are governments. And when there is lot of savings trying to pull down the economy, governments lower interest rates thereby boosting investments. These investments ensure that there is sufficient liquidity in the markets. Thus even though consumers save, the situation is not all that bad, as government tries to balance the act from supporting the investment angle.

Now let us come to the crux of the topic. What if consumers are continuing to save, there is little liquidity in the market and the interest rates are too low that they cannot be cut any more (or cutting them down wouldn't make much of a difference)? Such a situation is called the liquidity-trap. This is what Japan has found itself in; this is what the US is probably heading towards. The interest rates in Japan are already hovering around 1%. The US interest rates are also similarly at 1%. Even if Ben Bernanke of the Fed decides to cut the interest rates, how much can he? If he makes it to 0%, will that be sufficient to boost the economy?

This is a trap as we can see, which gives no clear traditional routes to help the economy bounce back. In such situations, bailout packages become clearly necessary and that is when socialization of losses occurs. (The free market capitalists do believe in these kinds of socialistic principles as it suits them!). Remember that we are not talking about a third world impoverished country here. We are talking about America, the world's superpower. And this is a nation that will not hesitate to initiate a World War III if it only means that it will boost their economy.

The advocates of free market capitalism fail to address clearly such complex situations. While in theory, everything is a resource and can be scaled up and down as the situation demands, it is just theory. In reality, such corrections do not occur so easy and so fast. An example is wages. While wage increase is a demanded norm (in any market), wage decreases to support the economy are not and they tend to be sticky. And I think this may be a good time to start thinking about what Keynes said.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Capitalism & Socialism - Lecture Series - Part IV - Notes

In this note, we will talk about the third major reason that triggers a downward spiral of capitalism and socialism - manipulated and immaturely introduced policies. It will be anyone's guess that this post will be an unabashed criticism of the policies advocated by World Bank and IMF. No other organization or institution across the globe other than World Bank/IMF possibly can lead to such devastation in established structures so easily.

In letter and spirit these institutions strive to propagate wealth creation and upliftment of the poor, improvement of Global economy etc. However in reality, many of the policies pushed by the IMF in particular has resulted in deep devastation and increased the rich-poor divide in countries. So why do then these institutions claim credibility? It is because of 2 reasons. One, is that the policies pushed by IMF do result in short term success - increased GDP growth. Two, is that these institutions are front face of developed nations and are promoted heavily and control the cash flow to support developing and poor countries.

What the IMF and World Bank fail to understand is that by loaning money with lot of conditionality to open up at a feverish pace, they are not just undermining the democracy in the nation that is struggling to survive, they are also creating unhealthy growth. This is like giving the highest dose of anti-biotic to someone with regular fever. He/She will immediately respond, only to fail in the longer term. These countries suddenly see enhanced GDP growth for a maximum of 10 years, after which they fail dramatically, because of the rapid privatization and opening up of economy, which has failed to create real wealth inside the country. Adding to this, the rich poor divide increases as well... Russia is a beautiful example of such a disaster. Policies should always be tied to comparative advantage of the nation, the willingness of developed countries with absolute advantage to truly support the developing/poor nation which is under brink of collapse, history, labor power, democratic structure, geographic advantages, social structures, primary expertise and other important factors.

And of course, IMF and World Bank need to realize that helping a developing/poor nation doesn't mean just ensuring that the creditors for the country are protected. The goal should be truly to ensure elimination of poverty and prevention of collapse of social structures in the nation.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Capitalism & Socialism - Lecture Series - Part 3 - Notes

This is continuing the lecture on Capitalism & Socialism and today we will see the second reason I had listed as a cause for failure of these systems - greed & impatience. If you were to hear the campaigns of Obama and McCain, then you cannot miss the phrase "greed of wall street eating the main street" from both of them. They are not far from the truth. It is greed and a dose of impatience mixed together that actually leads to failure of any good system.

Where does this all start? It is tough to point out. But we can safely say that it possibly starts with investors who take equity stakes with the idea of making a quick buck. Make no mistake - it is NOT just retail investors like you and me who want to double and triple our holdings in few months by investing in stock market. It is even the seasoned investors, big financial institutions who want to do this. Not everyone is Warren Buffet, after all!

So when these investors want to make this urgent profit, they push corporations to show successes in their business every single quarter. Not just that, they want every corporation to better itself every single quarter. This pushes the corporations to try and do whatever it takes to be a leader in the market. They hire some of the best brains with exhorbitant salaries hoping that their innovative & leadership skills will be useful in this never ending competition.

When smart MBAs join with skyrocketing salaries and corner offices with few or no previous experience in corporations, they are under pressure to show results. And then they start innovating "bad" things - In financial institutions, this leads to innovation of bad instruments like sub-prime lending, reverse mortgages etc. which take advantage of unsuspecting human behavior (which is coupled with little greed anyway). Thus a vicious circle is formed where investors are investing in nothing continiously. And when is it found that there has been no foundation and no pillars of support, the entire building collapses, taking everyone with it.

As you can see the impatience of investors and greed of investors, coroporate management play key role in the downfall of a capitalist economy.

While greed plays a major factor in downturn of capitalist markets, impatience plays a key role in destroying socialistic structures. For wealth to be divided and a propotionate share to go to every participant, it is important that wealth be created and economy becomes rich. Any attempt to bring fairness in the system by excessive controls will result only in a temporary mirage of success. In the longer run, this arrangement will not work out as it will push the nation into backwardness and will not help poor to rise out of poverty. In addition, this will also lead to lot of unrest as control structures inherently lead to corruption, pesudo dictatorship and inefficiencies.

Thus a combination of greed and impatience has the power to ruin both capitalist as well as socialist set-ups. It is not a joke when they say "Good things come to those who wait!"

Friday, October 3, 2008

Lessons from Collapse of Golden age of 1920s

Ilian Mihov, Professor of Economics at INSEAD, on the lessons of the collapse of the ‘golden age’ of the late 1920s.

What is the biggest lesson from the Great Depression? In my view, it is that monetary policy and the financial sector play a crucial role in economic development. Let me put it more precisely: good monetary policy is unlikely to accelerate the speed of economic growth – after all we have more income year after year because mankind comes up with new ideas, with new products, with more efficient ways of producing output. However, bad monetary policy can easily derail economic development. It is true for rich and poor countries alike.

Why are financial markets and the banking sector so important? Banks fulfill a very important role in the economy by matching borrowers and lenders. When we deposit $100 in a bank, the bank keeps, at most, two to three dollars in its vaults (in fact the money is often in the central bank), the remaining $98 or so is lent to a borrower.

Most businesses require loans for their normal operations. When the banking sector does not work properly, businesses cannot get loans and they have to curtail their production and lay off workers. As they curtail production, they demand fewer products from their suppliers and therefore their suppliers have to reduce their output and fire workers. If manufacturers cannot sell their goods because the firm downstream does not need as many products as before, they cannot generate enough revenue to repay their earlier loans. Businesses go bankrupt and banks experience further problems as their balance sheet deteriorates due to non-performing loans. At this point, banks want to lend even less because of the uncertainty generated from bankruptcies. As they lend less, the vicious circle continues – with producers cutting production and firing workers. On the top of this, depositors start worrying about their deposits because the non-performing loans have made some banks go belly up – your bank has lent out your money to borrowers who cannot return it. Depositors start withdrawing their cash and banks have even fewer possibilities for lending as they have to hoard cash in case there is a run on the bank. If the financial sector does not work, the real economy can go into a deadly spiral and shrink by 30 per cent as during the Great Depression.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Capitalism & Socialism - Lecture Series - Part TWO - Notes

Before we start, on a side note, there were at least 4 mails in my inbox after the posting of the previous part which said that I have missed out one of the most important reasons for failure of economic systems - Sudden Economic or Geographic variations - If there is a wide set of people who think that this is an independent reason enough, then I guess I would still humbly excuse myself with the opinion that while it is of course a significant risk to the economy, it still wouldn't classify as a strong enough reason for failure of the overall system.

Let us have a quick look at reason - 1 - do not complement each other sufficiently. There is a very popular phrase that is doing rounds these days that sums it all - Privatization of profits and Socialization of losses. While profit making companies strive to make more money and increase their net personal gains, sometimes by hook or crook, the burden of failure unfortunately seem to exist with taxpayer money. There have been discussions and blogs and talks on the "correctness" of such actions - I have myself talked against such rescue plans for the fear of encouraging blinded risk taking by institutions who have the comfort of a couch-catch during a free fall.

However such a support is imperative. No matter what we crib about the protection being extended to foolhardy greedy behavior it is an absolute must. What is missing however is the kind of regulation that will keep blind risks in decent check in this case. Every time when excessive greed and immature policies bring about a halt in the flow of wealth creation, leading to losses and slowdown, collective responsibility steps in to smooth the fall. This has happened time and again, thanks to the voice of West in protecting the capitalist system.

The reverse support however is not happening that common. When socialistic structures crumble, the World watches reporting this downfall in full steam. The West hails this as a failure of communism and the so called World saving financial institutions like IMF and World Bank watch this as an opportunity to impose their "liberalization" policies as soon as possible into the falling nation, not worrying about the fact that the country may not just be ready to face that.

But why does this situation occur in the first place? To put it simply, everyone in the world (nation) needs to get a fair share of everything. While capitalism creates wealth and makes the human race rich, one of the many downfalls of the system is that, by itself, it doesn't do anything to the rich-poor divide other than increasing the gap. Hence a definite structure like socialism has to set in to ensure that everyone gets a fair share of wealth created. There is nothing wrong with that. But the problem comes, when people begin to question - WHEN?

How long does one wait to get a fair share before it can be distributed? Europe suffered centuries of dark ages and so does Africa today. If people today need to work tirelessly now so that wealth can be created over a period of time and then distributed, every worker will feel left out of enjoying the wealth that he/she helped create. This feeling worsens when they see some set of people (burgeoise - upper class) enjoy the wealth already. The unrest created leads to communist principles set in and socialism introduced prematurely. So now the nation tries to bridge the gap between rich and poor without proper means to do so. While initially this looks to work because of the iron hand with which this gets implemented, slowly and surely this model is bound to fail as it doesnt stand on a stable platform where wealth has been really created.

(This principle is something many of us tend to follow even though we laugh at socialism/communism. Will any of our IT Services friends reading this blog will agree to an arrangement if their company said that they will have to work for the next 20 years so that their company can create wealth and become profitable and if profits are created, they will be shared with their children later. We will crib at the top management for drawing handsome salaries while we slog around to help them make money. We will demand equal share of profits, equal salay across employees etc.)

And that is why precisely both models must work together. When capitalism is going about churning money, socialism has to step in to ensure that the rich-poor divide does not go out of control. And if prematurely induced socialism starts to crumble, there must be way to infuse wealth into the system so that the socialistic structure can hold ground.

So when the statement gets repeated that Socialism failed, one needs to understand that it is only the shortcut and premature inducing that has failed. On the other hand, capitalism will also crumble in the same account if losses were not socialized or if the rich-poor divide goes unchecked.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Capitalism and Socialism - Lecture Series Part -1 Notes

(Considering several questions around some of my thought process around liberalization, wealth creation and growth for all, I am going to present a condensed form of my lecture on this subject in "2 minute digest" series. This is the first part. Comments are welcome here or in any other forum as appropriate).

Capitalism and Socialism are 2 essential pillars of human eco-system. There is no one one model fits all in the Universe and both models back each other up. The obvious definition explains it all - Socialism ensures that everyone gets a fair share and Capitalism ensures that wealth is created so that it can be distributed. If it all that simple, then why do systems fail?

Systems fail because:
1. They do not complement each other sufficiently
2. Greed and impatience that is inbuilt in human instinct
3. Manipulated and immaturely introduced macro-economic policies

In the longer term, all three reasons play a equal role in failures; just that at some touchpoints one of them is highlighted more. In subsequent passages I will explain each one of them in detail.

Before we examine the structures of socialism and capitalism, it is imperative to understand that these social structures did not necessarily come out in the seventeenth century. While they have existed in preliminary forms (Robinhood was an early socialist!), both these structures came out as a fallout of the industrial revolution. As the industrial revolution laid the foundation to capitalism, it also led the way to a severe rich and poor divide, thus leading to a strong belief in socialism.

The second important fact is to realize that there has to be constant balance of one over the other. If either of the system progress on its own is unchecked, it will ultimately lead to a collapse because of a bunch of factors - most of which can be directly correlated to the three reasons stated above.

And the third important fact is to understand that International politics and diplomacy are not considered clearly in the underlying theories of these systems.

In the next part let us discuss the reason-1 in detail.

Friday, September 26, 2008

EBITDAT?

We all know that the billionaire investor Carl Icahn is a very shrewd investor. Of late, he has been sharing some of his views in his personal blog. And the latest one has a very interesting term that Icahn has coined - EBITDAT. Now for those of you who wonder what the last T stands for, it stands for THEFT. He jokingly says that the value of the company is not evaluated jusy by looking at EBITDA(which stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxation, Depreciation, Amortization btw), but by also looking out at the corporate theft of the company. 

Icahn is not necessarily joking. The upper management of troubled corporations, particularly financial institutions are very smart in innovating techniques to protect and expand their persoanl financial assets immaterial of the fact that there is a financial 9/11 going on and their company contributed to this downfall and is falling as well. While it is perfectly fair that executives of great-performing companies get paid handsomely, when failures are also rewarded in hidden forms, that is when the second T kicks in and plays the most significant role in EBITDAT.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

WB loses.. only this time not because of the Commies

West Bengal finally lost its golden chance boost employment and investment opportunities in the state. Only this time, one cannot completely fault the commies. For a change, the communists, with their more liberal leader Buddhadeb wanted to get the Tata Nano plant in Singur. As luck would have it, Mamta wanted to prove her might and she eventually did, by forcing Tatas to abandon the site and move off to a different place.

It is just ironic that such a problem happens to the Nano project which has the world watching with such an awe. It is also ironic that it didnt happen because of the communists.

Bengal is back into blackwoods, thanks to Tata saying goodbye to Singur. Now the hard fought land, whose value was estimated to grow in leaps and bounds that actually triggered of this issue, will once again be a wasteland, with no claims and drowned value; and several such areas of Bengal will go down in value as there will clearly be no more Indian investments (leave FIIs alone!) in the near future and some of the already made ones may just be urging to leave.

Politics at play against wealth creation. Surprisingly the commies watch it stunned.

The ICT Convergence

So after several years of talking, the industry is now walking the talk. The ICT convergence is set on full swing and a formal competition is also launched. Apple iPhone set a trend bringing in an instrument that exhibits potential to be the device of the future. And with Google & Amazon joining hands for the next one, threatening Apple's leadership in music industry along with, this competition is bound to become an interesting one.

When the most creative and risk-taking minds of the globe compete with each other, lets hope that our quest for the holy grail will become a reality soon. At some point we will have a device that can do/be: lock/open doors of homes/cars, toll/metro pass, camera/music/photos/games, internet/email/IM/video-conf, ration cards/passport/voter ID/driver license, remote control for TVs, TV/digi-movie screen, debit/credit cards..... I dont think I am dreaming too much. Most of this is already available in instruments today.. the SIM will be the alternate-blood of our life.

May we live in interesting times.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Stop it Merrill. You got Lynched

I couldn't control my laughter when I read this - Buy ICICI, Target 1010, advises ML .

Come on Merill. Stop advising people now. You have been bought. You have been shamed in public. And all smart egoistic investment bankers of Merill - THANKS for the comments, but we know better.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Wall Street Crisis and Why Financial Institutions Deserve this

Let me first start by assuring you that I am not a sadist. It is not good to see age old institutions crumble. It is definitely not good to see investors lose out millions of $$$ when such a crisis hits the street. But it is important to realize that it is the same set of greedy investors and limited-vision top-management that have caused downfalls of esteemed financial institutions.

The success of capitalism lies in the concept of wealth-creation. Remember that wealth creation refers to society in general. And this leads to betterment of lives of people. However financial institutions and greedy investors have read the text completely wrong. All they have managed to do is to just recycle wealth smartly.

And while taking someone else's wealth at the pretext of expanding it, the financial institutions have managed to keep a larger cut for themselves. As they ran out of ideas on this and the greedy investors pushed these companies to show increased growth every quarter, the companies hired brains from top schools, made them think like Shylocks and finally ended up innovating on stuff like sub-prime lending and reverse mortagages. In India, we have had similar innovations on sub-prime credit cards, unasked personal loans and improperly checked home loans.

The middle class, which is cursed to be a loser in every game, fell for this trap as usual. All these financial institutions have done is to suck blood of these unsuspecting middle class. When the loose foundation begins to crumble, these companies have no option but to cave in. Lehman, Merril Lynch, Bear Sterns, AIG - all are nothing but a failure in their own greed.. And with this downfall, they will take their greedy investors and unfortunately dependent industries and whole economy with them.

In India, good institutions like ICICI are also moving towards innovating on this sector. What everyone has to remember that success of institutions and economy & capitalism come by wealth-creation, not by robbing middle class and the like. I really hope that ICICI, HDFC etc.,
take good lessons from these fallen US giants. And IIMs and other institutions should stop teaching their students to be money bloodsuckers and instead show them the right way to make good growth.

And yeah, the rhetoric. The middle class should learn. After depression, sub prime, recessions, chit-funds, Harshad Mehta scandals, credit card payment issues etc., it is time to realize that only hard earned money and smart investments will sustain.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies


(Source: Gartner's review-July 2008)

Friday, August 22, 2008

Behind the scenes at Biz schools

Here is an article that, I am sure, most in top global business schools will definitely relate to, at least to some parts of it if not the whole. I know my ISB batchmates will!

(Reproduced verbatim from Business Week: Original article is here)

In Ahead of the Curve: Two Years at Harvard Business School, Broughton provides an insightful and entertaining, behind-the-scenes glimpse at a powerful institution that he sees as generally succeeding in its mission of transforming students into business leaders. But he views HBS as failing them in almost every other way. It is, in his persuasive account, a "factory for unhappy people."

Why this should be, despite the obvious successes and accomplishments of graduates, is a complex subject that Broughton dissects with a reporter's eye for detail. In his retelling, the 895 members of his class were men and women of modest talents but outsize ambition. Boastful, insecure, and occasionally charming, they were destined for careers that required them to sacrifice family and friends for the success they felt they so richly deserved.

As one of the handful of students who came to HBS in 2004 with few ambitions of his own—he had no idea what he wanted to do—Broughton was well qualified to describe how Harvard in particular, and B-school in general, does such people a disservice. With a second child on the way, he struggled to find a career path that would allow him to spend time with his family—a requirement that kept him from joining the droves in pursuit of consulting and investment-banking careers. The pressure to follow conventional paths is a recurring theme, with classmate after classmate either battling the forces of conformity or succumbing to the siren song. In the end, Broughton spent the summer after his first year in Cambridge working on a novel instead of an internship and graduated without a job after interviews at Google and McKinsey. Today, he retains one foot in journalism while pursuing a few "entrepreneurial ventures."

Broughton found little to criticize and much to praise about the HBS case study method, which gets students to find fixes for company problems. It's a testament to the method of the Harvard faculty that Broughton managed to become conversant in the language of business with so little prior exposure to it.

But ethics is another matter. Many of Broughton's classmates came to HBS ethically challenged, he says; some qualified for financial aid by depleting their savings with the purchase of expensive cars. But HBS didn't much alter their attitudes. In 2005, for example, 119 HBS applicants were caught attempting to hack into a Web site that stored admissions information. For those who had been accepted, Harvard retracted its offers, and its dean called the behavior "a serious breach of trust." But in Broughton's "corporate accountability" class, it was Harvard that was faulted—75% of the class sided with the hackers.

The author gives insight into daily life at Harvard and the "fear of missing out" that leads many students to attend every event, no matter how trivial. But in the end he didn't seem to find it "transformational," at least not in the way HBS hopes it will be. If anything, exposure to business in all its forms deepened his cultural bias against it. He came away appalled by the power that business wields in our society and by the ability of an institution like Harvard to perpetuate that state of affairs. "Has society allotted too much authority to a single, narcissistic class of spreadsheet makers and PowerPoint presenters?" he asks. Broughton leaves no doubt about what he thinks.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

11.2 million percent Inflation - you must be joking

Let me use few articles as a precursor to my one of my major article on "Why World Bank is a Irrelevant and Irresponsible Institution".

Zimbabwe is skyrocketing in its inflation. Currently the official figure stands at 11.2 million percent, while some of the private reports state that real inflation is close to 20 million percent. Billion $$$ notes are being printed in Zimbabwe and rates get higher by thousands for one SINGLE bread if you delay buying it even by a second. All this for a country which was not long ago called the Bread-Basket of Africa!!

True - it is yet another African country with irresponsible government, hopelessly uneducated mass, topping in corruption and scams blah, blah and blah. And yeah the West has denied every kind of support to the nation. Absence of donors means that the inflation is heading to even roaring heights. All pointing to mass killings & murders, refugees, countless starvation deaths and total collapse of yet another African nation.

And the United Nations and World Bank and IMF stand by and watch. It is not enough to have Millennium Development Goals... it is more important to save millions who are dying without food & water right in front of our eyes. Professor Jeffrey Sachs single handedly has done MUCH more in the past 20 years than what all of World Bank and IMF have done to prevent these kind of economic disasters.

It is easy to blame political parties and government in Zimbabwe for all this. What did the poor people who have no clue about any of this do? The only superpower of the World - United States - will fight in Iraq and other places for democracy. But it will stand by the egoistic economists in World Bank and watch the millions of poor African men & women and children die. After all, Zimbabwe doesn't have oil.

World Bank - be ashamed for what you do... and what you don't!.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Need Help with Biz plan in Social Sector

I am currently working on a Business Plan to create a self-sustainable platform that will enable socially underprivileged achievers (for example, Rank holders in High School/Higher Secondary coming from very poor sections of the society) to continue their education.

I need help in completing the Business plan. Help can come in the following areas
  • Coordinating the various sections of the plan
  • Putting the plan together in suggested formats
  • Presenting plans to appropriate audience
  • Research required to make the plan
  • Ideas for the business plan
  • Any other area...
If you would like to be a part of this socially relevant business plan effort, please comment in this post and I will get in touch with you.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Talent Myth

(Reproduced from Gladwell dot com and New Yorker)

Are smart people overrated?

1. Five years ago, several executives at McKinsey & Company, America's largest and most prestigious management-consulting firm, launched what they called the War for Talent. Thousands of questionnaires were sent to managers across the country. Eighteen companies were singled out for special attention, and the consultants spent up to three days at each firm, interviewing everyone from the C.E.O. down to the human-resources staff. McKinsey wanted to document how the top-performing companies in America differed from other firms in the way they handle matters like hiring and promotion. But, as the consultants sifted through the piles of reports and questionnaires and interview transcripts, they grew convinced that the difference between winners and losers was more profound than they had realized. "We looked at one another and suddenly the light bulb blinked on," the three consultants who headed the project--Ed Michaels, Helen Handfield-Jones, and Beth Axelrod--write in their new book, also called "The War for Talent." The very best companies, they concluded, had leaders who were obsessed with the talent issue. They recruited ceaselessly, finding and hiring as many top performers as possible. They singled out and segregated their stars, rewarding them disproportionately, and pushing them into ever more senior positions. "Bet on the natural athletes, the ones with the strongest intrinsic skills," the authors approvingly quote one senior General Electric executive as saying. "Don't be afraid to promote stars without specifically relevant experience, seemingly over their heads." Success in the modern economy, according to Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod, requires "the talent mind-set": the "deep-seated belief that having better talent at all levels is how you outperform your competitors."

This "talent mind-set" is the new orthodoxy of American management. It is the intellectual justification for why such a high premium is placed on degrees from first-tier business schools, and why the compensation packages for top executives have become so lavish. In the modern corporation, the system is considered only as strong as its stars, and, in the past few years, this message has been preached by consultants and management gurus all over the world. None, however, have spread the word quite so ardently as McKinsey, and, of all its clients, one firm took the talent mind-set closest to heart. It was a company where McKinsey conducted twenty separate projects, where McKinsey's billings topped ten million dollars a year, where a McKinsey director regularly attended board meetings, and where the C.E.O. himself was a former McKinsey partner. The company, of course, was Enron.

The Enron scandal is now almost a year old. The reputations of Jeffrey Skilling and Kenneth Lay, the company's two top executives, have been destroyed. Arthur Andersen, Enron's auditor, has been driven out of business, and now investigators have turned their attention to Enron's investment bankers. The one Enron partner that has escaped largely unscathed is McKinsey, which is odd, given that it essentially created the blueprint for the Enron culture. Enron was the ultimate "talent" company. When Skilling started the corporate division known as Enron Capital and Trade, in 1990, he "decided to bring in a steady stream of the very best college and M.B.A. graduates he could find to stock the company with talent," Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod tell us. During the nineties, Enron was bringing in two hundred and fifty newly minted M.B.A.s a year. "We had these things called Super Saturdays," one former Enron manager recalls. "I'd interview some of these guys who were fresh out of Harvard, and these kids could blow me out of the water. They knew things I'd never heard of." Once at Enron, the top performers were rewarded inordinately, and promoted without regard for seniority or experience. Enron was a star system. "The only thing that differentiates Enron from our competitors is our people, our talent," Lay, Enron's former chairman and C.E.O., told the McKinsey consultants when they came to the company's headquarters, in Houston. Or, as another senior Enron executive put it to Richard Foster, a McKinsey partner who celebrated Enron in his 2001 book, "Creative Destruction," "We hire very smart people and we pay them more than they think they are worth."

The management of Enron, in other words, did exactly what the consultants at McKinsey said that companies ought to do in order to succeed in the modern economy. It hired and rewarded the very best and the very brightest--and it is now in bankruptcy. The reasons for its collapse are complex, needless to say. But what if Enron failed not in spite of its talent mind-set but because of it? What if smart people are overrated?

2. At the heart of the McKinsey vision is a process that the War for Talent advocates refer to as "differentiation and affirmation." Employers, they argue, need to sit down once or twice a year and hold a "candid, probing, no-holds-barred debate about each individual," sorting employees into A, B, and C groups. The A's must be challenged and disproportionately rewarded. The B's need to be encouraged and affirmed. The C's need to shape up or be shipped out. Enron followed this advice almost to the letter, setting up internal Performance Review Committees. The members got together twice a year, and graded each person in their section on ten separate criteria, using a scale of one to five. The process was called "rank and yank." Those graded at the top of their unit received bonuses two-thirds higher than those in the next thirty per cent; those who ranked at the bottom received no bonuses and no extra stock options--and in some cases were pushed out.

How should that ranking be done? Unfortunately, the McKinsey consultants spend very little time discussing the matter. One possibility is simply to hire and reward the smartest people. But the link between, say, I.Q. and job performance is distinctly underwhelming. On a scale where 0.1 or below means virtually no correlation and 0.7 or above implies a strong correlation (your height, for example, has a 0.7 correlation with your parents' height), the correlation between I.Q. and occupational success is between 0.2 and 0.3. "What I.Q. doesn't pick up is effectiveness at common-sense sorts of things, especially working with people," Richard Wagner, a psychologist at Florida State University, says. "In terms of how we evaluate schooling, everything is about working by yourself. If you work with someone else, it's called cheating. Once you get out in the real world, everything you do involves working with other people."

Wagner and Robert Sternberg, a psychologist at Yale University, have developed tests of this practical component, which they call "tacit knowledge." Tacit knowledge involves things like knowing how to manage yourself and others, and how to navigate complicated social situations. Here is a question from one of their tests:

You have just been promoted to head of an important department in your organization. The previous head has been transferred to an equivalent position in a less important department. Your understanding of the reason for the move is that the performance of the department as a whole has been mediocre. There have not been any glaring deficiencies, just a perception of the department as so-so rather than very good. Your charge is to shape up the department. Results are expected quickly. Rate the quality of the following strategies for succeeding at your new position.

a) Always delegate to the most junior person who can be trusted with the task.
b) Give your superiors frequent progress reports.
c) Announce a major reorganization of the department that includes getting rid of whomever you believe to be "dead wood."
d) Concentrate more on your people than on the tasks to be done.
e) Make people feel completely responsible for their work.

Wagner finds that how well people do on a test like this predicts how well they will do in the workplace: good managers pick (b) and (e); bad managers tend to pick (c). Yet there's no clear connection between such tacit knowledge and other forms of knowledge and experience. The process of assessing ability in the workplace is a lot messier than it appears.

An employer really wants to assess not potential but performance. Yet that's just as tricky. In "The War for Talent," the authors talk about how the Royal Air Force used the A, B, and C ranking system for its pilots during the Battle of Britain. But ranking fighter pilots--for whom there are a limited and relatively objective set of performance criteria (enemy kills, for example, and the ability to get their formations safely home)--is a lot easier than assessing how the manager of a new unit is doing at, say, marketing or business development. And whom do you ask to rate the manager's performance? Studies show that there is very little correlation between how someone's peers rate him and how his boss rates him. The only rigorous way to assess performance, according to human-resources specialists, is to use criteria that are as specific as possible. Managers are supposed to take detailed notes on their employees throughout the year, in order to remove subjective personal reactions from the process of assessment. You can grade someone's performance only if you know their performance. And, in the freewheeling culture of Enron, this was all but impossible. People deemed "talented" were constantly being pushed into new jobs and given new challenges. Annual turnover from promotions was close to twenty per cent. Lynda Clemmons, the so-called "weather babe" who started Enron's weather derivatives business, jumped, in seven quick years, from trader to associate to manager to director and, finally, to head of her own business unit. How do you evaluate someone's performance in a system where no one is in a job long enough to allow such evaluation?

The answer is that you end up doing performance evaluations that aren't based on performance. Among the many glowing books about Enron written before its fall was the best-seller "Leading the Revolution," by the management consultant Gary Hamel, which tells the story of Lou Pai, who launched Enron's power-trading business. Pai's group began with a disaster: it lost tens of millions of dollars trying to sell electricity to residential consumers in newly deregulated markets. The problem, Hamel explains, is that the markets weren't truly deregulated: "The states that were opening their markets to competition were still setting rules designed to give their traditional utilities big advantages." It doesn't seem to have occurred to anyone that Pai ought to have looked into those rules more carefully before risking millions of dollars. He was promptly given the chance to build the commercial electricity-outsourcing business, where he ran up several more years of heavy losses before cashing out of Enron last year with two hundred and seventy million dollars. Because Pai had "talent," he was given new opportunities, and when he failed at those new opportunities he was given still more opportunities . . . because he had "talent." "At Enron, failure--even of the type that ends up on the front page of the Wall Street Journal--doesn't necessarily sink a career," Hamel writes, as if that were a good thing. Presumably, companies that want to encourage risk-taking must be willing to tolerate mistakes. Yet if talent is defined as something separate from an employee's actual performance, what use is it, exactly?

3. What the War for Talent amounts to is an argument for indulging A employees, for fawning over them. "You need to do everything you can to keep them engaged and satisfied--even delighted," Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod write. "Find out what they would most like to be doing, and shape their career and responsibilities in that direction. Solve any issues that might be pushing them out the door, such as a boss that frustrates them or travel demands that burden them." No company was better at this than Enron. In one oft-told story, Louise Kitchin, a twenty-nine-year-old gas trader in Europe, became convinced that the company ought to develop an online-trading business. She told her boss, and she began working in her spare time on the project, until she had two hundred and fifty people throughout Enron helping her. After six months, Skilling was finally informed. "I was never asked for any capital," Skilling said later. "I was never asked for any people. They had already purchased the servers. They had already started ripping apart the building. They had started legal reviews in twenty-two countries by the time I heard about it." It was, Skilling went on approvingly, "exactly the kind of behavior that will continue to drive this company forward."

Kitchin's qualification for running EnronOnline, it should be pointed out, was not that she was good at it. It was that she wanted to do it, and Enron was a place where stars did whatever they wanted. "Fluid movement is absolutely necessary in our company. And the type of people we hire enforces that," Skilling told the team from McKinsey. "Not only does this system help the excitement level for each manager, it shapes Enron's business in the direction that its managers find most exciting." Here is Skilling again: "If lots of [employees] are flocking to a new business unit, that's a good sign that the opportunity is a good one. . . . If a business unit can't attract people very easily, that's a good sign that it's a business Enron shouldn't be in." You might expect a C.E.O. to say that if a business unit can't attract customers very easily that's a good sign it's a business the company shouldn't be in. A company's business is supposed to be shaped in the direction that its managers find most profitable. But at Enron the needs of the customers and the shareholders were secondary to the needs of its stars.

A dozen years ago, the psychologists Robert Hogan, Robert Raskin, and Dan Fazzini wrote a brilliant essay called "The Dark Side of Charisma." It argued that flawed managers fall into three types. One is the High Likability Floater, who rises effortlessly in an organization because he never takes any difficult decisions or makes any enemies. Another is the Homme de Ressentiment, who seethes below the surface and plots against his enemies. The most interesting of the three is the Narcissist, whose energy and self-confidence and charm lead him inexorably up the corporate ladder. Narcissists are terrible managers. They resist accepting suggestions, thinking it will make them appear weak, and they don't believe that others have anything useful to tell them. "Narcissists are biased to take more credit for success than is legitimate," Hogan and his co-authors write, and "biased to avoid acknowledging responsibility for their failures and shortcomings for the same reasons that they claim more success than is their due." Moreover:

Narcissists typically make judgments with greater confidence than other people . . . and, because their judgments are rendered with such conviction, other people tend to believe them and the narcissists become disproportionately more influential in group situations. Finally, because of their self-confidence and strong need for recognition, narcissists tend to "self-nominate"; consequently, when a leadership gap appears in a group or organization, the narcissists rush to fill it.

Tyco Corporation and WorldCom were the Greedy Corporations: they were purely interested in short-term financial gain. Enron was the Narcissistic Corporation--a company that took more credit for success than was legitimate, that did not acknowledge responsibility for its failures, that shrewdly sold the rest of us on its genius, and that substituted self-nomination for disciplined management. At one point in "Leading the Revolution," Hamel tracks down a senior Enron executive, and what he breathlessly recounts--the braggadocio, the self-satisfaction--could be an epitaph for the talent mind-set:

"You cannot control the atoms within a nuclear fusion reaction," said Ken Rice when he was head of Enron Capital and Trade Resources (ECT), America's largest marketer of natural gas and largest buyer and seller of electricity. Adorned in a black T-shirt, blue jeans, and cowboy boots, Rice drew a box on an office whiteboard that pictured his business unit as a nuclear reactor. Little circles in the box represented its "contract originators," the gunslingers charged with doing deals and creating new businesses. Attached to each circle was an arrow. In Rice's diagram the arrows were pointing in all different directions. "We allow people to go in whichever direction that they want to go."

The distinction between the Greedy Corporation and the Narcissistic Corporation matters, because the way we conceive our attainments helps determine how we behave. Carol Dweck, a psychologist at Columbia University, has found that people generally hold one of two fairly firm beliefs about their intelligence: they consider it either a fixed trait or something that is malleable and can be developed over time. Five years ago, Dweck did a study at the University of Hong Kong, where all classes are conducted in English. She and her colleagues approached a large group of social-sciences students, told them their English-proficiency scores, and asked them if they wanted to take a course to improve their language skills. One would expect all those who scored poorly to sign up for the remedial course. The University of Hong Kong is a demanding institution, and it is hard to do well in the social sciences without strong English skills. Curiously, however, only the ones who believed in malleable intelligence expressed interest in the class. The students who believed that their intelligence was a fixed trait were so concerned about appearing to be deficient that they preferred to stay home. "Students who hold a fixed view of their intelligence care so much about looking smart that they act dumb," Dweck writes, "for what could be dumber than giving up a chance to learn something that is essential for your own success?"

In a similar experiment, Dweck gave a class of preadolescent students a test filled with challenging problems. After they were finished, one group was praised for its effort and another group was praised for its intelligence. Those praised for their intelligence were reluctant to tackle difficult tasks, and their performance on subsequent tests soon began to suffer. Then Dweck asked the children to write a letter to students at another school, describing their experience in the study. She discovered something remarkable: forty per cent of those students who were praised for their intelligence lied about how they had scored on the test, adjusting their grade upward. They weren't naturally deceptive people, and they weren't any less intelligent or self-confident than anyone else. They simply did what people do when they are immersed in an environment that celebrates them solely for their innate "talent." They begin to define themselves by that description, and when times get tough and that self-image is threatened they have difficulty with the consequences. They will not take the remedial course. They will not stand up to investors and the public and admit that they were wrong. They'd sooner lie.

4. The broader failing of McKinsey and its acolytes at Enron is their assumption that an organization's intelligence is simply a function of the intelligence of its employees. They believe in stars, because they don't believe in systems. In a way, that's understandable, because our lives are so obviously enriched by individual brilliance. Groups don't write great novels, and a committee didn't come up with the theory of relativity. But companies work by different rules. They don't just create; they execute and compete and coördinate the efforts of many different people, and the organizations that are most successful at that task are the ones where the system is the star.

There is a wonderful example of this in the story of the so-called Eastern Pearl Harbor, of the Second World War. During the first nine months of 1942, the United States Navy suffered a catastrophe. German U-boats, operating just off the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean, were sinking our merchant ships almost at will. U-boat captains marvelled at their good fortune. "Before this sea of light, against this footlight glare of a carefree new world were passing the silhouettes of ships recognizable in every detail and sharp as the outlines in a sales catalogue," one U-boat commander wrote. "All we had to do was press the button."

What made this such a puzzle is that, on the other side of the Atlantic, the British had much less trouble defending their ships against U-boat attacks. The British, furthermore, eagerly passed on to the Americans everything they knew about sonar and depth-charge throwers and the construction of destroyers. And still the Germans managed to paralyze America's coastal zones.

You can imagine what the consultants at McKinsey would have concluded: they would have said that the Navy did not have a talent mind-set, that President Roosevelt needed to recruit and promote top performers into key positions in the Atlantic command. In fact, he had already done that. At the beginning of the war, he had pushed out the solid and unspectacular Admiral Harold R. Stark as Chief of Naval Operations and replaced him with the legendary Ernest Joseph King. "He was a supreme realist with the arrogance of genius," Ladislas Farago writes in "The Tenth Fleet," a history of the Navy's U-boat battles in the Second World War. "He had unbounded faith in himself, in his vast knowledge of naval matters and in the soundness of his ideas. Unlike Stark, who tolerated incompetence all around him, King had no patience with fools."

The Navy had plenty of talent at the top, in other words. What it didn't have was the right kind of organization. As Eliot A. Cohen, a scholar of military strategy at Johns Hopkins, writes in his brilliant book "Military Misfortunes in the Atlantic":

To wage the antisubmarine war well, analysts had to bring together fragments of information, direction-finding fixes, visual sightings, decrypts, and the "flaming datum" of a U-boat attack--for use by a commander to coordinate the efforts of warships, aircraft, and convoy commanders. Such synthesis had to occur in near "real time"--within hours, even minutes in some cases.

The British excelled at the task because they had a centralized operational system. The controllers moved the British ships around the Atlantic like chess pieces, in order to outsmart U-boat "wolf packs." By contrast, Admiral King believed strongly in a decentralized management structure: he held that managers should never tell their subordinates " 'how' as well as what to 'do.' " In today's jargon, we would say he was a believer in "loose-tight" management, of the kind celebrated by the McKinsey consultants Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman in their 1982 best-seller, "In Search of Excellence." But "loose-tight" doesn't help you find U-boats. Throughout most of 1942, the Navy kept trying to act smart by relying on technical know-how, and stubbornly refused to take operational lessons from the British. The Navy also lacked the organizational structure necessary to apply the technical knowledge it did have to the field. Only when the Navy set up the Tenth Fleet--a single unit to coördinate all anti-submarine warfare in the Atlantic--did the situation change. In the year and a half before the Tenth Fleet was formed, in May of 1943, the Navy sank thirty-six U-boats. In the six months afterward, it sank seventy-five. "The creation of the Tenth Fleet did not bring more talented individuals into the field of ASW"--anti-submarine warfare--"than had previous organizations," Cohen writes. "What Tenth Fleet did allow, by virtue of its organization and mandate, was for these individuals to become far more effective than previously." The talent myth assumes that people make organizations smart. More often than not, it's the other way around.

5. There is ample evidence of this principle among America's most successful companies. Southwest Airlines hires very few M.B.A.s, pays its managers modestly, and gives raises according to seniority, not "rank and yank." Yet it is by far the most successful of all United States airlines, because it has created a vastly more efficient organization than its competitors have. At Southwest, the time it takes to get a plane that has just landed ready for takeoff--a key index of productivity--is, on average, twenty minutes, and requires a ground crew of four, and two people at the gate. (At United Airlines, by contrast, turnaround time is closer to thirty-five minutes, and requires a ground crew of twelve and three agents at the gate.)

In the case of the giant retailer Wal-Mart, one of the most critical periods in its history came in 1976, when Sam Walton "unretired," pushing out his handpicked successor, Ron Mayer. Mayer was just over forty. He was ambitious. He was charismatic. He was, in the words of one Walton biographer, "the boy-genius financial officer." But Walton was convinced that Mayer was, as people at McKinsey would say, "differentiating and affirming" in the corporate suite, in defiance of Wal-Mart's inclusive culture. Mayer left, and Wal-Mart survived. After all, Wal-Mart is an organization, not an all-star team. Walton brought in David Glass, late of the Army and Southern Missouri State University, as C.E.O.; the company is now ranked No. 1 on the Fortune 500 list.

Procter & Gamble doesn't have a star system, either. How could it? Would the top M.B.A. graduates of Harvard and Stanford move to Cincinnati to work on detergent when they could make three times as much reinventing the world in Houston? Procter & Gamble isn't glamorous. Its C.E.O. is a lifer--a former Navy officer who began his corporate career as an assistant brand manager for Joy dishwashing liquid--and, if Procter & Gamble's best played Enron's best at Trivial Pursuit, no doubt the team from Houston would win handily. But Procter & Gamble has dominated the consumer-products field for close to a century, because it has a carefully conceived managerial system, and a rigorous marketing methodology that has allowed it to win battles for brands like Crest and Tide decade after decade. In Procter & Gamble's Navy, Admiral Stark would have stayed. But a cross-divisional management committee would have set the Tenth Fleet in place before the war ever started.

6. Among the most damning facts about Enron, in the end, was something its managers were proudest of. They had what, in McKinsey terminology, is called an "open market" for hiring. In the open-market system--McKinsey's assault on the very idea of a fixed organization--anyone could apply for any job that he or she wanted, and no manager was allowed to hold anyone back. Poaching was encouraged. When an Enron executive named Kevin Hannon started the company's global broadband unit, he launched what he called Project Quick Hire. A hundred top performers from around the company were invited to the Houston Hyatt to hear Hannon give his pitch. Recruiting booths were set up outside the meeting room. "Hannon had his fifty top performers for the broadband unit by the end of the week," Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod write, "and his peers had fifty holes to fill." Nobody, not even the consultants who were paid to think about the Enron culture, seemed worried that those fifty holes might disrupt the functioning of the affected departments, that stability in a firm's existing businesses might be a good thing, that the self-fulfillment of Enron's star employees might possibly be in conflict with the best interests of the firm as a whole.

These are the sort of concerns that management consultants ought to raise. But Enron's management consultant was McKinsey, and McKinsey was as much a prisoner of the talent myth as its clients were. In 1998, Enron hired ten Wharton M.B.A.s; that same year, McKinsey hired forty. In 1999, Enron hired twelve from Wharton; McKinsey hired sixty-one. The consultants at McKinsey were preaching at Enron what they believed about themselves. "When we would hire them, it wouldn't just be for a week," one former Enron manager recalls, of the brilliant young men and women from McKinsey who wandered the hallways at the company's headquarters. "It would be for two to four months. They were always around." They were there looking for people who had the talent to think outside the box. It never occurred to them that, if everyone had to think outside the box, maybe it was the box that needed fixing.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Wi-Fi in cars - the Chrysler way

Innovation has no boundaries and these days anything that lacks innovation doesnt seem to sell. Value added services is another keyword that companies rely upon - to make a sale. Chrysler, following the footsteps of Ford is now bringing in cool-classy value added services. Their latest proposition is to provide Wi-Fi hotspots in their Chrysler cars.

This is like following cellphone way. Tired of bringing in clarity, easy UI, slimmer handsets and the like, manufacturers tuned in their innovation antennas started adding every value added stuff like camera, speakers, MP3 players, photo albums and what not. Now US Auto-kings picked a cue from this and started adding stuff like DVD players, handsfree cellphone receivers, speed-radar detector and now latest is the Wi-Fi hotspots.

But looks like the Detroit dullheads would never get it. The value for value added stuff comes ONLY when the base product is strong. Would you consider buying a cellphone just because it has camera and maybe even a mini-printer(!!) fully knowing that it has a very poor reception or poor mics or bad battery life? People dont buy Chrysler or Chevy or Ford not because it doesnt come with Wi-Fi, but because it drinks fuel so much. Innovation is not to be done just because it needs to be done. The Detroit cars are BAD - bad for fuel-conservation, bad for purses, bad for environment as a whole. Toyota sells because they give fuel efficient cars - not because they give OnStar or a camera in the hood to take pictures while driving.

Maybe Motown three should stop innovating and go back to working on basics.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Influence lazy government agencies

Last 2 days have been buzzing with the news of how Amazon has stopped shipping to South Africa using their postal service citing rising thefts. Amazon is now offering only priority shipping though reputed courier services as opposed to using the Government postal agencies.

As with any government response, the postal agency has retorted that the thefts were down by 69% from last year and their success rate currently was at 99%!. In spite of such interesting numbers, Amazon, which has a mission to be Earth's most customer centric company, has decided to cut off its shipping through the SA post offices.

Angry customers are now forcing SA post office to look inward to resolve the problem. Few hours after the first announcement, SA post office declared that they were trying to contact Amazon to resolve the root cause of the problem. The post office said that Amazon is a important customer for them.

This signals many things - first being that the government agencies feel the pinch to change their attitude and work culture; second that even private agencies can induce change into such never-changing government institutions.

Will such a thing happen in India?

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Camel is a Horse designed by a committee

I hate meetings - long ones; no defined agenda; with few participants who come into work just for chairing or attending meetings. So any research essay that demerits meetings is a cup of lassi for me!

Slow Leadership came out with a strong post that can summarized that more meetings mean less trust.
In the list of activities that waste time and cause worthless frustration at work, meetings rank very near the top. Not only do many meetings fail to result in any clear decision, leaving you wondering why people came together in the first place, others have no discernible purpose at all. Worst of all, holding too many meetings passes a strong message: the boss doesn’t trust the team to function without his or her constant interference; and colleagues don’t trust one another not to undermine them in some way.
I would vote with the article more than one hundred percent. Most meetings dont result in any decision making - all people do is pass the buck. If one takes a bold decision, then he/she shows a dominating attitude; decision by consensus happens in meeting post lunch sessions. Most of the time the only decision taken is when to meet next to discuss the issue.

The status meetings are by far the worst - they are like reading all your spam mails, junk folder mails, bulk mails and forcing others to read them too. In addition to pervasive distrust that the author talks about, I believe that CYA plays a key factor in meetings.

The other funny thing is to keep saying "Lets take this offline". If you were to take it offline,
then why call a meeting in the first place?

As techies say, No-Laptop meetings makes sense. No meetings make more sense!