Progressive Bihar - Finally the sleeping giant is waking up

Progressive Bihar - Finally the sleeping giant is waking up
Progressive Bihar - Come support it's growth path.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Patna to be developed as Major Tourism destination

Mr. Nitish Kumar has correctly understood that Tourism is one of the avenues that will accelerate the growth in Bihar. In a recent annoucement he has said that Patna will be developed as an important tourist destination.
Two projects where work is in progress in full swing at Patna are
  1. An international class museum on Belly road that will showcase the heritage and history of Bihar
  2. Buddha Smriti Park: A Buddha Smriti park is being setup at the site of the old Patna Jail at the cost of Rs. 150 crores. Nitish Kumar has requested Dalai Lama to innaugurate the park. This will increase the flow of international tourists to Patna and Bihar
Similarly he is focusing on developing various other tourism locations, improving connectivity and  infrastructure in and around these tourism locations and providing better stay facilities in these locations.

More information on the above steps is available in the Press release of the state government.

Attempt to improve discipline within State Government employees

I think Bihar government has realized that improving the bureaucracy and the state government functioning and reducing corruption is an important task for succesfully developing Bihar. Thus besides the decision of setting up special corruption courts, Bihar government has also amended the disciplinary rules for state government employees. These amendments remove the vagueness in the rules which could be mis-interpreted in one's favour earlier on.

Now punishments are clearly defined which will improve the functioning of the state machinery.

More information about these changes are available in the Times of India article Fresh rules to discipline state govt employees

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Fundamental Rights of Citizens of India

Fundamental Rights enjoyed by the Citizens of India
 
The Constitution of India offers all citizens, individually and collectively, some basic freedoms. These are guaranteed in the Constitution in the form of six broad categories of Fundamental Rights, which are justiciable. Article 12 to 35 contained in Part III of the Constitution deal with Fundamental Rights. These are:
  1. Right to equality: Right to equality, including equality before law, prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth, and equality of opportunity in matters of employment;
  2. Right to freedom: Right to freedom of speech and expression, assembly, association or union, movement, residence, and right to practice any profession or occupation (some of these rights are subject to security of the State, friendly relations with foreign countries, public order, decency or morality);
  3. Right to freedom from exploitation: Right against exploitation, prohibiting all forms of forced labour, child labour and traffic in human beings;
  4. Right to freedom fo religion: Right to freedom of conscience and free profession, practice, and propagation of religion;
  5. Culture and Educational rights: Right of any section of citizens to conserve their culture, language or script, and right of minorities to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice; and
  6. Right to constitutional remedies: Right to constitutional remedies for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
I am posting the above reminder and refresher on fundamental rights in wake of the discrimination happening against people in various part of India. These fundamental rights list has been taken from the Know India: National Portal of India

Special corruption courts in Bihar

The Bihar state cabinet approved the constitution of special courts for corruption cases against all state public servants (people who draw salary from the state government).

Bihar has been plagued by corruption over the years in every part of the public services. Some of the corruption stories I have heard are
  1. PWD engineers going to office only 2-3 times a month and most of the time to collect their salaries and other TA/DAs and sign the attendance register.
  2. People in positions of power taking money from potential candidates for recruitments into government jobs. E.g. someone was asked to pay 2 lakhs to get a havaldar's job, some years back.
  3. Bribes taken from pensioners to release their pension amounts.
  4. Bureaucrats and other government functionaries taking money for any action requested by the common people.
  5. Corruption in the police, judiciary, bureaucracy, politicians... ever aspect of Bihar's state functionaries.
The biggest roadblock for Nitish Kumar in trying to improve Bihar besides shortage of investments in the state, is the corruption prevailing in the state. Corruption doesn't seem to have gone done even after so much effort has gone into Bihar's development. If anything else, many state functionaries in the last 4 years or so have made more money than ever before because money was being invested into the state. Hence reducing corruption is an important and herculean effort that has to be taken up.

This new step will hopeful go a long way in reducing corruption in the state and thereby increasing the prosperity of the state.

More details can be read in the article Bihar to get special corruption courts

Friday, February 5, 2010

Nitish Kumar 2.0 - - - Bureaucracy

Nitish Kumar's term as the Chief Minister of Bihar comes to an end this year. As I look back to the four years and three months of his government, I have a sense of elation. He has achieved many milestones, some of them a first for Bihar. Besides the development activities in Infrastructure, Health Care, Education, etc that have been spoken before, some of the notable changes worth mentioning are
  1. Visibility of Bihar in India and the world: There was a time that most of India looked down upon Bihar and hardly anyone outside India except Indians knew about Bihar. Today in a changed scenario, Bihar is being recognized and written about in many leading publications in India and outside.
  2. Media presence: Over my readings, I was suprised to see that many Indian publications had negligible presence or no presence and coverage of Bihar. Searches on articles of even some national level publications will only throw up a handful of articles on Bihar. But now all publications want to write about Bihar and increase their coverage of Bihar.
  3. WB/ADB: World Bank and Asian Development Bank are also taking note of changes in Bihar and are willing to provide and are providing developmental loans to Bihar.
  4. US ambassador also visits Bihar: When did we last hear of any other country's ambassador, leave aside the, visit Bihar. Today we had the US ambassador to India visit Bihar for two days which symbolizes the change in perception of Bihar.
  5. Bill Gates Foundation: Bill Gates Foundation also found it correct to enter into Bihar and partner with it in it's social ventures.
Thus Nitish Kumar has been able to create a visibility for Bihar and which is really very good. Better roads, security, healthcare, education are an important consideration for any investor to invest in Bihar and we have seen that happen.

But there is another side of the story too. As I look at the achievements, I also wonder about the things still to be done. And the list that comes up is significantly large. There are so many areas which require rejuvenation without which Bihar cannot sustain a growth rate that actually impacts and improves the lives of the downtrodden and the poor at the grass root level.

In the last 60 years only Nitish Kumar has brought about a visible change and created the expectations of Bihar's growth in the minds of the Biharis and the Indian people as a whole.  And I firmly believe that he is the person who can bring about further changes which will make Bihar truly rocking and moving in the direction of accelerated growth. Therefore it is necessary for Nitish Kumar to continue the stewardship and be the Chief Minister for the next 5 years term too. Thus I call the next five years of Nitish's leadership as Nitish Kumar 2.0

I will write about some of the issues that Nitish Kumar has to really look into, in a series of posts that I will be posting over the next few months covering one issue at a time. Today I will cover Bureaucracy which I feel has one of the most important roles to play in Bihar's development.

Bureaucracy: The biggest hurdle in Bihar after politics and law and order was the bureaucracy. Even though we have seen significant improvements in the law and order scenario, there has been negligible change in bureaucracy. There definitely are some bureaucrats who have played a very important role in Bihar's development and they cannot be ignored at all, but the vast majority of the other bureaucrats have not changed at all. If anything, many of them are making more money today because there are more investment funds available in Bihar.
  1. To cite an example, DM (District Magistrate) courts/adalats are supposed to be held once every month to settle problems that fall under the jurisdiction of the DMs. In a case related to my family's property there has been a wrong doing at the local admistration level and has to be resolved in the DM's adalat. Unfortunately the DM adalat has not sat for the last 9 - 10 months as the hearing gets canceled everytime. We are given a date for the next hearing and this happens every month without the hearing actually happening. And this is the case with the present DM. The case has been with the DM courts for over 3 years now and an earlier DM had held his adalat and gone through the hearing twice without taking any concrete action. As the case involved is simple the DM could have dispensed it in one hearing but probably he expected us to bribe him to correct a wrong which was caused by a slip up by the local administration and an advantage taken by the local goon.
  2. Another example of the lack of action is an article I had written on my blog Investment proposals since 2006 in Bihar: Progress of Bihar  which was also marked to Mr. Nitish Kumar. I was very impressed that Mr. Nitish Kumar actually read my post and asked the Industries division to respond to me on that post. I did get a reply too from the Dy. Director-cum-Incharge Lok Grevances (Industries department, Govt of Bihar) over an email sent using yahoo mail (which itself is impressive considering that they do not have official email). However the reply was very generic and I had sent a follow up email asking questions. I am yet to receive a reply. I am attaching the original letter and the email communication to them below.























It is quite possible that they missed out my email and I have sent them a reminder. It is also possible that I might have to use the RTI act to get these details, but no one has responded back. This is the sorry state of our bureaucracy even today. Does this mean that to get a reaction we have to write to the Chief Minister all the time? My email sent to them is given below:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Prashant
Date: Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 11:55 AM
Subject: Re: Change in destiny and progress/investment proposal since 2006.
To: dtdbihar@yahoo.co.in

Dear Sri Ravi Bhushan Prasad Sinha/ Sri Mahesh,
I would appreciate a reply to my email.

Thanks
Prashant

On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 7:26 PM, Prashant wrote:

Dear Sri Mahesh,
Thank you for the mail and the attached letter. I was a little tied up and could not reply back earlier.

I appreciate the fact that 220 or more projects have been approved by the Bihar government. However I would like to know how many projects have been fully implemented, how many projects have been commissioned and how many are in the advanced stage of development. I could not find any data on this. Would it be possible for you to send me some information on this like

1. How many of the approved projects in the last 3years have been implemented and are fully live and the value of each project.
2 How many of the above implemented projects have been completed in the last one year and the date of completion of each.

You can send me the above in excel format. It could contain the following information
1. Project name
2. Location
3. Value
4. Approval date
5. Vendor / Company
6. Project implementation start date
7. Project implementation completion date

I am sure this information would be available but would have to be put together in a format like above. So I am assuming it might take a week or two to put together and hoping that I get this report back by the end of this month. If there is any challenge in getting the data by the end of the December, do let me know by when it would be possible to send it across.

Appreciate your help and efforts. I am sure the Bihar team is working hard on improving and growing the state. This information will help us understand the progress and communicate the same to the all the people who are interested in knowing the state of investment implementation in the state.

Thanking you

Best Regards
Prashant

On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 5:10 AM, wrote:

Dear Sri Prashant,

Please find attached file.

With regards,
Dy Director-cum- In-charge LOK Grievance,
Department of Industries, Bihar, Patna.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thus a revamp of the bureaucracy is needed today and is one of the biggest hurdles in Bihar's growth. Besides focusing on other areas of growth, the Chief Minister also has to improve the bureaucracy and make it more responsive to sustain the growth levels required to make Bihar a developed state.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

New medical, engineering and MBA colleges planned in Bihar

The Bihar government emphasizing focus on education has decided to start 19 superspeciality medical colleges, 23 engineering colleges and a couple of management institutes in the next five years.

Dy. CM, Sushil Modi in an interview to Economic Times not only mentioned the above but also said that their focus would be to build the IT industry in Bihar (Patna) and make it an important IT destination after Bangalore. He has said that the government is finalizing the IT policy and is in talks with IT companies to setup offices in Bihar. With the finalized IT policy, incentives would be given to IT companies starting operations in Bihar.

I think both the above actions are good moves in the right direction as lesser people will now go to other states and invest in those states for higher education. At the same time after graduation, students will have more job opportunities to work in the hitech industry without leaving Bihar.

I hope whichever party comes to power in the forthcoming assembly elections follows through with the above plan.

The interview of Mr. Modi can be read in Economic Times at Bihar can be the next top IT location: Deputy CM Modi

Monday, January 18, 2010

Vaishali to be developed as an international tourist center

Bihar government has realized that developing tourism is very important for the faster growth of Bihar.

In this series the government has decided to develop Vaishali as an international tourist center. This is a good news as even though Vaishali is famous all over Bihar, hardly anyone outside knows about it.

Good move.

The news article can be read at Vaishali to be developed as 'international tourist attraction'

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Why is Bihar poor?

Many states have talked about step motherly treatment from the central government and this is often a political statement. However the statistics from Bihar and the disparities are hard to ignore when it comes to the question of step motherly treatment towards Bihar by the central government.

  1. Road Density: State’s road density (per head of population) is the lowest and is about 40% of the national average.
  2. Railways: Bihar has boasted of many Railway Ministers but the rail route density is also the lowest (if we ignore Kerala and the hill states).
  3.  Power generation capacity: Bihar has less than 1% of the country’s power generation capacity. This is the condition of the state which had a high level of coal and other mineral deposits not long ago. Even power plants sanctioned by the state government / central government are not coming up because
    1. Bihar not being given coal linkages by the central government
    2. Bihar asked not to use water from the river Ganga for power generation
  4. Power consumption: Per capita power consumption is 12 percent of the national average.
  5. Revenue resources: Very limited. Just 10% of Haryana’s per capita
  6. 5 year plan outlays: Bihar’s per capita plan outlay has been the lowest among all states in most plan periods. Some of it was offcourse Bihar’s fault (example Lalu’s era) but even in Nitish Kumar’s period, Bihar continues to be under-invested for development even though Nitish has been asking for funds from long
  7. Freight equalization policy: This policy of the past half century has neutralized whatever locational advantage Bihar had for attracting natural resources based industry. And then the special tax benefits to better-off states have indirectly compounded the damage.
  8. Bank loans: Since industry is bare minimum in Bihar, most of the money that banks collect as deposits in Bihar is being loaned out in other states.
Most of the above can be attributed to the Central government. But lets leave the past and concentrate on the present and the future.

Today the state has an atmosphere which is conducive to investments. Then why are the Central Government and the Planning Commission hesitant to invest in Bihar? Isn’t Bihar a part of India? Doesn’t Bihar deserve to grow when it has helped other states to prosper either by giving natural resources or by giving the labor workforce? By one estimate the Punjab farms and the farmers are only thriving because of Laborers from Bihar. If the laborers stop going there, the farm industry there will collapse as Punjab doesn’t retain most of its youth who move out to greener pastures in India and abroad).

Isn’t it time for the Prime Minister – Chairman of the Planning Commission, the Dy. Chairman of the planning commission – Mr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia and the Central Government to overcome political compulsions and support the cause of Bihar. Till when can they ignore the 3rd most populous and the poorest state of India (the highest number of poor people live in Bihar).

Its time for everyone to ask our Prime Minister and Mr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia – When will you start thinking for Bihar and its people???

The above statistics are taken from the article T N Ninan: Why Bihar is poor published in the Business Standard and authored by Mr. T. N. Ninan

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Nitish Kumar's speech at the ET Business Reformer of the Year 2009 award ceremony

Hi friends,
I liked this speech of Mr. Nitish Kumar at the Economic times forum and sharing it with everyone. This speech has been posted on youtube and we are able to watch it courtsey Mr. Shatrughna1.


Sunday, January 10, 2010

Bihar - A Growth Story - TOI - Mumbai Edition




Absolutely Happy to read this full page article in The Times of India - Mumbai Edition on the 10th of January 2010. Similar articles in different editions of TOI.

Here is the article and for those who want the PDF version of the page , the same can be found at Bihar - A growth story


BIHAR, A GROWTH STORY
From Basketcase To Booming Economy, Bihar Is On The Mend. Sunday Times Makes A Ground Check
Raj Kumar TNN


Roads “as smooth as Hema Malini’s cheeks” was a promise that Lalu Yadav had once given to the people of Bihar. Ironically, it is his rival Nitish Kumar who seems to be delivering on that front. Despite three years of floods followed by a year of drought, ‘backward and benighted’ Bihar reports a miraculous figure: 11% GDP growth, second only to Gujarat. The state’s economy has never grown so fast so consistently as it has since 2004-2005. A few pointers on what’s going right in Bihar:

Getting anywhere in Bihar has always been an exercise in endurance. But that’s changing. More than 6,800 km of roads have been relaid and 1,600 bridges and culverts constructed in the last four years. Journey time in India’s 12th largest state, sprawling over 94,163 sq km, has been cut by half today in many places. Now, most of the state’s 38 districts — from northernmost West Champaran to Kaimur on the western end — are a drive of six hours or less from Patna.

Automobile sales in the state grew 45% in 2009, at a time when sales had dipped 20-25% in several other states during the economic slowdown. Is this buying spree an indication that a section of Biharis have more money to splurge than they did earlier? “A few people had money earlier too, but they didn’t flaunt it for fear of attracting extortionists and kidnappers,” says Ranjit Singh, director of a highend Patna hotel. That fear may have evaporated now.
Only 317 kidnappings for ransom were reported during the last four years as against 1,393 during the previous four. The kidnapping industry has clearly fallen on hard times. One indication of this is that doctors no longer refuse to go to patients’ homes on emergency calls. “Today you can see boards at clinics saying we go on calls,” says Dr Amulya Kumar Singh, who runs a nursing home in Patna.

Most of Bihar’s infamous dons are behind bars. That includes Mohd Shahabuddin, the former RJD MP who had once gone live on TV, daring the state police chief to arrest him. Things are a little different now. A ruling JD(U) MLA, Sunil Pandey, attempted an encore of sorts in early 2006 when he brandished a revolver and talked murder on TV. But Pandey found himself behind bars within no time. Speedy trials have ensured a total of 38,824 convictions between 2006 and September 2009.The convicts included dons and their henchmen.

Gun-toting strongmen are no longer a common sight on the streets of Bihar. Policemen patrol them now. And places like Siwan, where Shahabuddin once held sway, do not get deserted after dusk.

This improvement has shown results. Malls, shops and private educational institutions are coming up. So are mobile service providers and banking firms. It’s boom time for real estate with apartment buildings coming up all around. “That’s because even non-Biharis for a change want to have a foot in Bihar which has become a better place to live in,” says economist Shaibal Gupta of the Asian Development Research Institute. Adds Faizal Alam of Kalyanpur Cements, “Cement inflow to the state went up 18% to 51 lakh tonnes in 2008-09.” That’s an indicator of the construction boom.

Ironically, this economic growth has happened without any worthwhile contribution from the manufacturing sector. The state’s economy is growing because of a boom in agriculture and services sectors. “It’s government induced growth,” admits Bihar Industries Association (BIA) president S P Sinha. According to former BIA president K P S Keshri, private investments in the manufacturing sector have been as little as Rs 1,500 crore during the last four years.

Many attribute the growth to the fact that the flow of Central funds to states has increased manifold in recent years. In the case of Bihar, it went up from Rs 37,341 crore during the fiveyear period 2000-2005 to Rs 55,459 crore during the next three years. But equally importantly, the funds are now getting better utilized than during the Lalu-Rabri regime when large chunks remained unspent. Also, adds Gupta, the state made concerted efforts to mobilise internal resources with its own revenue collection going up from Rs 2,919 crore in 2003-04 to Rs 5,256 crore in 2008-09.

The flip side is that much of this growth does not get reflected in social indicators which remain abysmal. But, as Gupta says, it would be unrealistic for anyone to “expect the moon” at this stage. “Right now the fundamentals are getting corrected and therefore you can find mostly infrastructural indicators of growth; one will have to wait for social indicators to become visible,” he says.

While contractors and realtors stand to gain, more than half the state’s 8.2 crore people — 1.25 crore families — still live below the poverty line. For these families to prosper, Bihar desperately needs huge investments and more growth. The State Investment Promotion Board, formed by the Nitish government, has received proposals worth Rs 96,000 crore. But most of them, especially the major ones, remain on paper as Central rules prove a stumbling block. For instance, thermal power plants cannot come up in Bihar because the Centre has so far refused to provide coal linkages to ensure regular supplies to any such new plant.

Also, Bihar has a lot of catching up to do with the rest of India. “There cannot be any comparison between Gujarat and Bihar, both of which reportedly grew by over 11%; since our base is low, even a small investment results in impressive growth in percentage,” Gupta points out. State officials admit that crucial sectors like health are still sick with meagre resources in comparison to other states.

From its bleak past, Bihar may be finally moving towards a brighter future, but the common Bihari is not patting himself just yet. Maybe he is still waiting for this high growth to translate into better food on his table and more money in his pocket.

BUT MILES TO GO

POVERTY 54.4% of the population is below the poverty line; national average 37.2%

HEALTH 32.8% children fully immunized; all-India 43.5% 55.9% children underweight; national average 42.5% 45.1% women underweight, highest in the country; national average 35.6%

AGRICULTURE 81% of the population employed in agriculture, directly or indirectly 2.7% Annual growth in agricultural GDP (1993-2003); all-India growth 2.2%
ROADS 70% of the inhabited areas in Bihar are not connected by motorable roads, which is the highest in the country

INDUSTRY 3.2% Share of industry in economy; all-India 20.1%
POPULATION 82.9m Bihar’s population, growing at more than 2% per annum (2001 census) 90% of the population lives in rural areas

LAND HOLDINGS 0.75 hectare Average size of holdings; national average 1.41 hectares 82.9% Share of marginal holdings less than 1 hectare

FLOODS 68.80 lakh hectares Total flood- prone area in Bihar, which is 73.06% of its total area and 7.2% of the total flood-prone area in the country

Source: Report of Special Task Force on Bihar, 2008

Friday, January 8, 2010

Bihar Growth Statistics and Image Management - Article by Mr. T. V. Sinha

This is an extremely well written email from Mr. T. V. Sinha that has highlighted the changes that have come in Bihar. I am sharing this email with everyone so that not only members of some yahoogroups but also everyone who ever thinks of Bihar and does an online search should know that Bihar is changing.... and that it is changing for Good.

Anyone who wants the email id of Mr. T. V. Sinha can write to me and I will share the email id.

--------------------------------------------------


On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 3:31 AM, TV Sinha wrote:


Bihar is at the cusp of a major change. Or as Ajit Chauhan puts it, it is at the tipping point. We have all seen the reports of CSO giving the high growth rate of Bihar. Unsurprisingly, there has been an equally vehement outcry against these positive news articles. If these were constructive criticism, one would have learnt something from them, but unfortunately, much of this outcry is simple denigration. In such a scenario, we Biharis are duty bound to work together and present the true picture of Bihar. Image makeover is essential if Bihar has to catch up with the rest of the country or indeed the world. Last five years have shown some hints of growth. The next five years are crucial whether Bihar will be on road to progress and growth or will slip back to underdevelopment and ignominy.

I have tried to collect recent criticism of Bihar and put the rebuttal to those. Hope this helps counter the continued denigration of Bihar

Agriculture growth of Bihar has languished:

It is certainly not a fact that Bihar is at the bottom of growth in the farm sector. Indeed, today Bihar is self sufficient in food, which was not so earlier. Farm sector has grown at 5.6% per annum over a five year period and is a great achievement.

It can be a matter of research how this growth in farm sector could have been even higher if there was a major irrigation investment, which has not happened in Bihar. Farmers have innovated and achieved growth. Some of these are private investment in farm automation, improved seeds and fertilizer and training of the farm hands due to their exposure to farming in Punjab, Haryana etc where the agricultural universities have played in farm hand training. Also, thanks to better availability of information, price realization for the farmer is much better which incentivizes higher farm productivity.

If Agricultural growth is only 5.6%, how has a largely agrarian Bihar economy grown at 11.03%:

Well, the growth in 2004-9 and 1999-2004 sector wise is as follows:

Agriculture: 5.6% from 2%; Manufacturing: 8% from -1.9%; Construction 35.8% from 8.4%; Telecom 17.7% from 9.4% and Trade, Hotel, Restaurant: 17.7% from 11.6%

Indeed, the growth has come from largely from what is called services sector at an aggregate level. But there is no reason to doubt the growth figure itself.

Here are some more specific statistics: Consumption of cement in Bihar has grown 27% vs the India average of 9%, no of flights from Patna has increased as follows: from 2 to 5 to Delhi, from 2 to 5 to Calcutta, From 2 to zero to 2 to Mumbai, from zero to 1 to Hyderabad and Bangalore each. Gaya had virtually no regular flights five years back. Today, it has 25 international flights a week to Bangkok, Colombo, Paro, and Singapore. The number of bridges constructed between 1975 and 2005 was 300 and is over 400 between 2005 and now â€" Nitish Kumar inaugurated 140 bridges on June 14, 2009 in a symbolic gesture; the number of vehicles in Patna has increased from 1.75 lakhs in 2007 to 2.93 lakhs in 2009, a 67% increase in just two years.

Bihar growth is on a low base. Specifically, can a poor student who had scored a low 30 who has now scored 45 be considered successful when a good student has moved from 80 to 85

Economic growth is always taken on the existing base. China has been considered a miracle economy for two decades now, but can hope to catch up with US only by 2035. Economies can only grow gradually, not suddenly. The case of Bihar is like any other growing economy. Also, bear in mind that in spite of the low base, the economy was not growing fast earlier. In 2005, after the hung assembly which could not produce a government, Bihar bashing journalists, inspired by the MV Kamath who had infamously said that Biharis are not fit to rule Bihar and require extended outside tutelage, had grandly suggested President's Rule. The conventional wisdom had suggested that we can only get a government worse than that of Lalu. Bihar can only go down. Is there any reason we should not celebrate the success which has been achieved in such a hopeless environment?

Data is given by Bihar and not by CSO.

Well this is the same for all the states and has been the same in the past also. This system has not changed this year. For example, the growth of Gujarat is also based on the figure given by the Gujarat govt. Also, I find it quite funny that Pronab Sen of CSO should so disown the data released by his own department. They are not a clerical staff tasked to aggregate the data, but Cnetral Statistical Deptt who have all the tools and expertise available to cross verify the data with other trends as also sample survey that they do.

The number of BPL family has increased from 66 lakhs to 1.25 crore:

Bihar govt says the original figure of 66 lakhs was an underreporting. They quote the figure of 1.25 crore to get more funds for the BPL families. This has absolutely no relevance or relation with the economic growth or the lack of it.

Simple fact is that annual plan expenditure for Bihar has increased from 2500 crore in 2004-05 to 1200 crore in the current fiscal year. This has naturally led to growth of the economy. Also, fruits of liberalization such as disbanding of freight equalization has finally started to yield. That perhaps is also the reason for Jharkhand's growth.

Besides all these, the focus of the state govt on law and order and the commonsense schemes of the govt like strenghtening PHCs, road improvement ot make Patna accessible within 5 hours from any part of Bihar etc have played a major role in the growth.

Finally, in addition to the great philosophical tradition of Bihar, trade and commerce have had a long history, broken only in the dark sixty years of Delhi iimposed fabian socialism. The tome of Chanakya is called Arthashashtra - the treatise of money. Sonepur has had the largest cattle fair of the world since time immemorial. The most exploitative Nawabs of Bengal could not diminish the mercantile importance of Patna during the 18th century. Andrew Yang, an academic from US did a research and wrote the book Bazzar India which chronicles this. Time has come to reclaim the leadership in the economic sphere and the whole world will be at the feet of Bihar.

Let us see the glass as half full rather than rue that it continues to be half empty. Not too long time back, it is fully empty!

Let me end by giving a link to India Today which also printed an article on Patna titled P for Progress

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/76746/India/State+Scan+-+Patna:+P+For+Progress.html

Thanks

T V Sinha

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Livemint article (Signs of renewal in Bihar) and my take on it.

Signs of renewal in Bihar

From: Prashant
Date: Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 2:32 PM
Subject: Signs of renewal in Bihar
To: views@livemint.com

Interesting article and well summarized as far as the status of the state is concerned over the last so many years. However I think its not just the change in guard from Lalu to Nitish that is responsible for the double digit growth in GDP or the changes that have come up in the state but the focused efforts made towards improving the health of the state.

Some of the changes that have come in, in the last years are

  1. Improved governance leading to improved security. Number of incidents of crime and kidnapping have reduced. More criminals including MPs have been convicted and are serving life sentences.The vehicular population in Patna for example has more than quadrupled in the last 4 years. This has not happened in Bihar during the entire economic boom in India after 1991 until 2005. And many vehicles now ply on the road after 7 PM which was not the case some years ago.
  2. Educational infrastructure is being improved. More primary education centers are being implemented and existing failing infrastructures are being reconstructed. More than 2 Lakh teachers have been appointed.
  3. Healthcare has seen significant improvement. From a mere 4000 baby deliveries happening in the PHCs , the number has gone upto 80,000 because healthcare has improved, doctors are present and medicines available.
  4. Infrastructure improvement is taking place. There are better roads and better connectivity.
  5. Tourism is picking up: The number of foreign tourists visiting Bihar has gone up by 5 times in the last 4 years.
  6. Investment projects are getting clearances and proposals worth more than 75,000 crores have been approved even though the work on them are in the initial phases.

Obviously there are many inherent problems like casteism and corruption in Bihar that cannot be eliminated in a 5 year period. But the government is building the foundation of education that will lead to the reduction of these kinds of inherent problems.

There is still a lot to be done. In my personal belief the work done in Bihar in the last 4 years is not yet become self sustainable. This will only happen when enough interest has been generated in the state wherein

  1. Significant investments are made into the state
  2. More job opportunities are created for the people of the state
  3. Media provides enough coverage and acts as a check and balance in the state. Example : carrying out sting operations on bureaucrats, etc can create the atmosphere for people to avoid carrying out their corrupt practices.Or for example, media uses its reach to educate people on the positive as well as negative changes happening in the state.
  4. Various political parties do not just play mere political games when it comes to the question of the development of the state.

This is where your role as media comes up. Obviously you do not have enough coverage of the state and therefore are not possible aware of some of these changes that are happening. However your help can improve the state by highlighting the investment opportunities in the state as your paper is read by many people who control investment decisions in their companies.
I had a similar thinking like yours until a year back when I started tracking the changes in the state and was at first as surprised as you and questioned the fact that were these things really happening. Now I know that if the government continues doing the same kind of work that its been doing in the last 4 years for the next 5-10 years, Bihar will become one of the most developed economy in India. You might want to read about Nitish Kumar's plan 2015 or the progress reports that are released every year by the government. I track these changes and you might be able to get more information on these changes, if you so desire from my blog http://progressivebihar.blogspot.com/

You may want to begin with the reports on the right hand side of my blog.

Appreciate your patience in reading through this entire email.

Thanks
Prashant


----------------------------------------------------
http://www.livemint.com/2010/01/03184644/Signsof-renewal-in-Bihar.html?atype=tp

Signs of renewal in Bihar

Bihar is often seen as India’s Somalia: a failed state run by a venal political elite, a civil society fractured by caste, a dysfunctional bureaucracy that does not police the streets or ensure that teachers attend school and an economic sinkhole bypassed by the economic boom that has transformed the country. Biharis have voted with their feet, and their mass migration has led to a backlash in cities as diverse as Mumbai, Guwahati and Ludhiana. Bihar is too big and strategically important to be allowed to wallow in backwardness. The new numbers published by the Central statistics office offer hope of renewal: They show that the state’s output from 2004-05 to 2008-09 grew at a double-digit annual rate, outperforming India as a whole. It is yet not clear what has propelled Bihar’s growth in these years, but one clear possibility is the change of government in the state: from Lalu Prasad to Nitish Kumar. No economy can grow when the rule of the law has collapsed and deep institutional decline raises the cost of economic activity, constant features on the Bihar landscape since at least the end of the 1980s. The larger lesson is that the politics of redistribution inevitably becomes a grab for resources unless robust economic growth keeps the cake growing. That is the tragic dividend of Mandalism. It is hard to believe that Bihar was rated India’s second best governed state after Independence by the Paul Appleby report. The late journalist and political thinker Arvind Das saw Bihar as a metaphor for India. He often pointed out that this is the state of Gautam Buddha and King Ashoka, of Rajendra Prasad and Jayaprakash Narayan. It’s now the state of anarchy. It is too soon to conclude that Bihar has healed and is ready to participate in the modern Indian economy as an equal partner rather than as a laggard that sucks public funds and sends millions of impoverished immigrants to other states. There is always the danger of reading too much into random bits of statistics; the same mistake was made with West Bengal a few years ago, which grew at around 1 percentage point faster than the national average for around 10 years but really does not offer enough economic opportunity to its residents compared with what states such as Gujarat, Tamil Nadu or Karnataka do. It is hard to believe that a mere change in the state government can uproot deep-rooted problems within five years. But there is definitely reason to believe that the Nitish Kumar government has done enough to undo some of the worst features of the Lalu Prasad years.Is Bihar on the path to recovery? Tell us at views@livemint.com

Saturday, January 2, 2010

11.03% - Bihar's GDP growth rate between 2004-05 and 2008-09

The nation today will wake up to the reality that Bihar has been the second fastest growing economy in India in the last 5 years. At 11.03% GDP growth rate, Bihar is only marginally behind Gujarat whose GDP grew by 11.05%. This is surely going to make heads turn across India. Who would have thought that a state which had 5.15% negative GDP growth in 2003-04 and had been consitently declining in all sectors and all aspects, could change so much in so little a time.

This is another proof that good governance and a will to change things can do wonders. Kudos to Mr. Nitish Kumar and his team for doing something which many would have thought impossible or even a miracle to achieve in Bihar.

Everyone has heard the hype associated with the Gujarat growth story over the last few years, but Mr. Nitish Kumar and his team have again slowly and steadily brought about a change and shown the way of progress, which has become a hallmark of Mr. Nitish Kumar. Obviously it would have been more difficult to change a state like Bihar compared to Gujarat which was already prospering.

I am really happy that many people today will sit up and take notice of the change that has come to Bihar and will start appreciating the Bihari people more than they did before.

The detailed news can be found in the Times of India article "Bihar grew by 11.03%, next only to Gujarat"


Friday, January 1, 2010

Happy New Year 2010

Dear Friends,
Wish you all a Very Happy and Prosperous New Year. Have a wonderful year and may you achieve all your goals for this year.

Lets also hope that Bihar too has a great and prosperous new year.

Regards
Prashant

Monday, December 7, 2009

Another award for Nitish Kumar - Polio Eradication Champion Award

Nitish Kumar became the 3rd Indian after PM Manmohan Singh and Rajashree Birla of Birla group to be conferred the Polio Eradication Champion Award by the Rotary International’s Polio Plus Committee.

Nitish Kumar joined the likes of US president Barack Obama and former president Bill Clinton, UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon and his predecessor Kofi Annan, Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and many others who have received this award before.

In his acceptance speech Nitish Kumar said "“I feel honoured to receive this award which is not my personal achievement, but it is for Bihar and all those involved in polio eradication campaign."

Rotary International’s Polio Plus Committee Chairman Robert S. Scott said that 2006 was declared Year of Immunization in Bihar and by 2008 the state made tremendous progress in polio eradication campaign. He said that 99 per cent children were immunized which he said was a major achievement.

Bihar is an endemic state and till date has 111 polio cases: 38 of P1 type and 73 of P3 type. Nitish said, in 2007 there were 459 cases of P3 and 46 of P1 type.

The full article in Times of India can be read at Polio Eradication Champion Award for Nitish

Vote - "Indian of the Year 2009" on NDTV

NDTV poll is on for choosing the Indian of the year 2009. Those who want to vote should do so at the following link.

http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/new/VOTEINDIANOFTHEYEAR2009.ASPX

Mr. Nitish Kumar is one of the 5 nominees from the political field.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Strengthening the judiciary and the dispute resolution system.

We have made substantial progress in improving the law and order situation in many parts of Bihar. The intial efforts saw a lot of sweeping changes like reduced street crimes, reduced kidnappings, etc. People once again are gaining confidence to walk outside, for example on certain roads of Patna even after 7PM in the evening.

The next step requires more efforts, the results are not likely to be visible immediately but are very critical in improving the overall fabric of justice in Bihar. I am talking about strengthening the Judiciary and the mechanisms for dispute resolution; I am talking about faster resolution of cases in the judicial courts, courts of DMs (District Magistrates) or any other formal places of justice.

Often I find that because judiciary is week and habitually corrupt, many cases keep on dragging for a long time... Many times the cases just drags along even without any hearing happening... Dates are assigned for hearing a case and because of some reason or the other, the hearing doesn't happen on the assigned date.

Infact my family is also currently undergoing this where some part of a property we own was fradulently sold by someone to someone else and the buyer even managed to get this registered even though the property was in our name and we were no where close when this transaction happened. Over 3.5 years back, we have registered a case in the court of the DM who has the authority to resolve the problem, and with all the necessary documentation and evidence available the case can be resolved in 1-2 hearings only. But it has hardly made any progress. And for over a year now (maybe even 2), we just keep getting dates and for some reason or the other the hearing doesn't happen on the assigned date and we get a new date. And over the course of these 3.5 years, the DM at this place has changed thrice, thus compounding the problem.

Hence by this example I wanted to re-iterate that the government has to bring back the people's confidence, that has been lost, in the judicial system of Bihar.

It is also time for the government to focus on this aspect of improved governance and timely justice which are essential for an upcoming and developing economy to have so as to be able to attract increased investments and people's interest in developing Bihar.

One news article which caught my eyes and prompted me to share my thoughts above, was the article titled 300 crorepati babus in Bihar! This article talks about how 300 government employees earning modest salaries have become crorepatis by taking bribes and participating in underhand activities and how even though 71 such babus were caught by the state vigillance bureau till last month, only two have been fired while the rest continue to hold on to their secured jobs, continue to make their bribes and continue to stall the process of justice in their cases (and we can all guess what this delay can be attributed to). If the judiciary and the dispute resolution mechanism is strengthened, such babus will be punished faster sending out the right signals to all the other corrupt officials in the state, thus reducing the level of corruption across the state.

Nitish Kumar ji: An area where the law ministry has to focus on.

Signs of progress

It pleases me to no end when I hear or read about something related to Bihar which further indicates that Bihar is making progress. I just read one such article which spoke about two situations that re-inforced the view that Bihar is making progress.

On wednesday (2nd December 2009), the BCC (Bihar Chamber of Commerce) invited the police for an interraction with its members. Representing the police department was Patna Zone IGP Mr. P. N. Rai. Such interractions are organized periodically where the BCC members tell about the problems they are facing to the police. Anybody can guess what the majority of the problems highlighted at these meetings in the last decade or more would have been... yes ... extortions and kidnappings... i.e. rangdari....

But this wednesday's meeting was very different. Instead of talking about rangdari, the BCC members were discussing traffic problems and traffic jams in Patna... Different... isn't it? Gone are they days when the main item on the agenda was rangdari... infact former BCC president Mr. Yugeshwar Pandey told the IGP "It is a compliment to your policing that we are not talking about `rangdari' which has almost ended". Now that people, who can effect changes, are free from worrying about extortions and saving themselves from kidnappings, they can focus on other developmental issues ... like the one about traffic jams in Patna...

I like this... it is a sure sign of a changing and progressing Bihar...

A second sign of progress is that the number of vehicles has increased 4 times in the last 4 years. Gone are they days when you would hear of someone's new car being hijacked or snatched as the owner drove the car from the showroom to his home. And then all of us know the long circulating humour about where that the car was likely to be found... At the house of the very politician friend whom the owner of the car would approach for help in finding his car.

Obviously, in the last 2 decades, given the way Bihar was deteriorating, no one thought that we could have a situation of traffic jams because of increased vehicles in Patna so quickly. But now that the increase in vehicles has become a reality, it is important to improve the infrastructure in Patna and other places as these places showcase Bihar's development opportunity and it would not look good for Bihar if potential investors land into traffic jams even before the industrial revolution in Bihar takes off.

While the police, BCC and other institutions think of ways to tackle this growing traffic situation, we should also do our bit for improving the traffic conditions in Bihar... like parking at proper places and not in the middle of the road, obeying traffic rules and not defying any of the traffic signals, listening to the traffic havaldar or inspector, etc. These small small changes from everyone will go a long way in making a strong and beautiful Bihar.

The article I refer to was published in The Times of India and can be found at " Traffic snarls, not crime, worry traders now" for those who are interested in getting more details.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Future of India linked to the future of Bihar

An update to the below reproduced article: This is actually an article published by Mr. N. K. Singh , MP Rajya Sabha, from Bihar and only posted on the Life Boat Foundations Webpage. The original article was published on MoneyControl and the link to the article is as follows:

http://www.moneycontrol.com/mc10/leadership/article.php?autono=422050&sr_no=1

-------------------------Earlier Article-----------------------------

I came across a very interesting article on Bihar on a website that tracks high impact progresses. This website talks about the poverty in India, China and Brazil and then has a detailed focus on Bihar. This is a news service of a foundation called Life Boat Foundation and has provided a compelling view on Bihar. I was intrigued by this article and reasoned that it would be worthwhile for more people to read this article. This article published on 29th November 2009 is titled "Poverty in Brazil, China and India and in Particular Bihar, India"

I am reproducing a section from the above article verbatim, which is very relevant from Bihar's development perspective. It is a detailed assessment and worth reading.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Five factors leading to endemic economic backwardness of Bihar:

1. In the post-independence period, the policy of freight equalisation did not enable Bihar to derive the advantage of its rich mineral resources as well as a large growing market. This policy which remained effective from 1952 to 1993 had serious repercussions in neutralising Bihar’s comparative factor advantage.

2. Notwithstanding Bihar’s considerable clout in the Central Government, central investments, (except by Public Sector Undertakings in what is now Jharkhand), there was little investment North of the Ganges or in the drought-prone areas in the South of Bihar.

3. The failure to break away from the past in implementing tenurial land reform changes resulted in excessive social stratification which prevented both vertical and horizontal mobility. Excessive preoccupation with caste and even communal factors dominated political discourse. Successive Governments were not held accountable on indices of improvement in life quality and other developmental indicators either in the overall growth achievement or performance of Index of Human Resource Development.

4. The failure to transit from a feudal-based economy to a market-oriented economy emphasised value systems which did not facilitate rapid economic development. This coupled with poor quality of infrastructure, social indicators and governance quality did not enable the State to attract meaningful private investment even in areas of its comparative factor advantage. Poor governance also resulted in decline of education and health.

5. The political parties in the State failed to secure meaningful arrangements with Nepal for better harnessing its river and hydro electric potential. The Kosi and Gandak embankment, the result of international treaty with Nepal, did bring significant relief to a large population in North Bihar from the vulnerabilities of floods but could not convert these transitional arrangements to permanent solutions.

These temporary structures have long outlived their expected life span, and in any case they were designed to be transitional arrangement to be followed by taming these rivers upstream to harness the irrigation and hydel potential. These remained unimplemented. Durable infrastructure wasn’t created to withstand the destruction due to periodic floods and other vulnerabilities.

During the last four years, the initiatives taken by the Nitish Kumar Government have concentrated on six factors.

- Improved Governance
- Macro Management
- Human Resources Development
- Emphasis on factor endowments
- Enactment of key legislations to improve climate for private investments.
- Improvement of Infrastructure.

The future of Bihar would depend on five key variables.
1. To what extent fiscal federalism works in a manner which is in line with the spirit of the constitution? This concerns four components.

The compensatory additional central investment in a State considering that in the near future private investment will remain shy.

To what extent will the State be enabled to take fuller advantage of Central investments already made, namely a higher percentage of allocation from Central power projects? The present agreements are discriminatory and unequal. These agreements do not enable the State to secure a fair percentage of the energy produced in the State.

Permitting the development of downstream industries from existing Central investment, say from the Barauni refinery as well as other investments which may be in the offing.

A degree of fairness in access to raw material inputs like coal for new power generating companies necessary to meet the energy deficiency in the State.

2. The State has to succeed in harnessing its rich water potential through the optimum utilisation of resources and adoption of new technology. It’ll prove their comparative factor advantage in agriculture. The extent to which agricultural productivity can be enhanced by diversified agriculture practices, creating and implementing an enabling policy framework.

There is also a broader issue of mitigation and adaptation to Global Warming and Climate Change. Does it make sense for planners in India to pursue, say water intensive cultivation in other parts of India which are water deficient than say North Bihar, where water is abundant? What special assistance can be given for enabling Bihar to become the food granary of India?

In Punjab water aquifers have fallen significantly and rice production may become increasingly more expensive. This is an opportunity for Bihar to enhance both the production and productivity of its agriculture even as further research and development is needed to develop strains and cropping patterns which better factor the consequences of global warming.

3. To what extent can its very young population be harnessed and vocational skills imparted to create the “Missing Middle”. This entails increasing urbanization very significantly through many more satellite towns and skill inculcation programme which can provide gainful employment activities outside agriculture sector, even while agriculture can gain advantages of externalities in scale instead of an exclusive reliance on agricultural produces.

4. To what extent can Bihar leverage its political power to create an enabling international framework on sharing our river basins, particularly with Nepal for generating irrigation and hydel potential to optimise the resources of this region.

5. The issue of whether Bihar can rewrite its history, and foster new green shoots of investments, employment and diversification in its activity patterns?
All these, of course require continued good governance and stable policy framework and institutions which can incentivise private investment.

The restoration of Bihar’s lost glory will demonstrate the success of strategic initiatives and technology can do to one of the most backward and densely populated regions in India. Unless backward States become growth drivers, India would find it difficult to grow at 9 per cent. In some ways the future of India is linked with the future of Bihar.

The original article in its entirety can be found at
Poverty in Brazil, China and India and in Particular Bihar, India

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Flights of prosperity

One of the indicators that the Bihar economy is developing is the airline traffic to Bihar. Bihar's Jayaprakash Narain International airport was one of the most under-utilized airport in a state capital of India. Till last year there were a total of 8 landings and take-offs from this airport. Compare this to the airports in Mumbai or Bangalore where there are more than 650 take offs and landings everyday.

But this scenario is slowly changing. Today there are 12 takeoffs and landings taking place from the Bihar airport. However the clincher is the growing number of passengers travelling to and from Patna by air, which has steadily increased in the last few months.

Air travellers to and fro from Patna:
Month20082009Percentage change
May32,24936,00711.65%
June 28,96036,73126.83%
July26,58338,77845.87%
August21,95539,25678.80%
September23,11739,69671.71%
October 27,71156,049102.26%

While it will take more time to get all of India's important destinations connected to Patna, I am sure as the pace of the development continues and further accelerates, we will be seeing not only more domestic connections but international flights also taking off from Bihar.

This increasing air traffic from Patna is already generating more interest in the airline industry and we are likely to see more low cost air connections being established between Patna and major cities of India.

Development, isn't it?

Read more details in The Times of India article `Sushasan' effect: Flyers' flow up

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Connected Biharis

I was recently going through the various groups related to Bihar on the internet, specifically the yahoo groups and google groups (i.e. egroups). However, I couldn't not find many Bihari groups with more than a thousand members. If I put together all the Biharis in the various groups, I would say that all the groups put together there will not be more than 5000-6000 members in all these groups who are interested in Bihar. I also believe that there would be some of us who are members of multiple groups and thus, I do not think there are more than 3500-4500 unique members in all the groups put together.

This is a very small set of Biharis who are connected to each other specially when one considers the population of Bihar and the number of Biharis who can possibly become connected. I am even more surprised when I see groups from other smaller states that have memberships of more than 10,000 members.

There could be multiple reasons for the current situation

1. Most Biharis are not aware of the existence of these groups that connect each of us together.

2. Most Biharis who are outside Bihar are not aware of the activities of these groups.

3. Often, looking at the appalling condition of the state in the last 20-30 years before 2005, people from Bihar were sometimes subject to jokes and ridicules at the hands of other Indians. Disenchanted by the despicable state of Bihar where they did neither find a source of livelihood nor saw any improvements or development, the people got disconnected with Bihar as they did not have any hopes from Bihar. The result was that many people from Bihar hid their Bihari identity and disassociated themselves with anything related to Bihar atleast publicly. So often a Bihari would claim to be from Delhi or Mumbai or Chennai and make no mention of Bihar. Thus even though there are many renowned Biharis in various fields, they are not connected with Bihar.

4. Many Biharis outside Bihar do not know about the changes that have come to the state in the last 4 years. Many of them do not know that Bihar has changed from being a Bimaru state - a failed state to a developing and progressing Bihar.

It is important to get all these people who have their roots in Bihar to get connected back to it. Many of these people would be in a position to influence and can help in expediting the growth and development of Bihar, be it financially by investing in the state, or intellectually by providing their thoughts, suggestions and ideas.

We all happen to know other Biharis who are not connected. Hence in my view, we should convince all these people to get connected and be involved in the growth of Bihar. Let all these people start by becoming members of any of the groups that might meet their views and needs:

Bihar-Network, biharbrains , Bihari , worldbihariforum , coolbihari, Progressivebihar : These are some of the groups that come to my mind.

Nitish Kumar ji: I don't know if there is any database or registry that tracks the Bihari people. It might be a good idea to establish a database of Biharis all over the globe. It could be a database probably on the http://gov.bih.nic.in/ site where people could come and voluntarily register themselves. We can promote this database and get as many people as possible to register. I think people power can be a catalyst in speeding up the investment process in Bihar which will result in its development. Hence the Information Technology department of the state should analyze such an option and initiate the creation of such a database. Another benefit I see is that the Bihari population will feel more connected with Bihar. This can also serve as future communication tools for connecting to various people from Bihar.

Promotions for this database would be required and I think that can be done by advertizing about it on newspaper sites like Timesofindia.com and rediff.com, etc. Besides the various people in our groups can help by passing on the information to the other Biharis that they might know.

This is an initial thought and I think there can be other advantages for creating such a registry or database.

Kolkata - Varanasi river cruise - An opportunity to showcase Bihar's tourism heritage

A cruise trip on Ganga was introduced between Kolkata and Varanasi on the September 29, 2009 and has attracted many foreign tourists. This opens up opportunities for the Bihar Tourism team to showcase Bihar's art and culture and tourist destinations as the cruise makes it way through Bihar.

It is definitely an opportunity to improve our aquatic tourism opportunities and attract many more tourists to Bihar. Some of the examples could be
1. Dolphin eco-tourism
2. Aquatic sports : If we can develop this in the Ganga / other river tributaries)
3. Aquatic Museum : We should definitely invest in building a good fish aquarium, and if possible an underwater aquarium. An underwater aquarium definitely attracts a lot of tourists and the feasibility should be checked if we can have one in Bihar.
4. Bihar art's and crafts should be showcased at various places on the route.
5. At these centers, the other tourist destinations like wildlife tourism, etc should be advertised using electronic billboards, Sinages, etc.

Its an opportunity and BSTDC has taken up the some of the above activities. However there is an opportunity to use this cruise for the strategic development of Bihar's underdeveloped tourism (the non-Buddhist circuit). This opens up opportunities for private entrepreneurs also to showcase and sell Bihar's handicrafts, etc and develop private theme parks etc like a water park,

Some of the activities that the BSTDC has taken up and more related information can be got from the article River cruise boosts Bihar handicrafts sale in The Times of India.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Madhubani - Education Sector - Job Opportunity

All,
I came across this job opportunity in one of the Bihar related yahoo groups. This is a job opportunity for teachers and a Principal in Madhubani required from April 2010. You may pass it on to people who might be interested. Anyone who is interested can directly get in touch as per the email below.

I am pasting the contents of the email below.

====================================================================

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Raj Singh rajsingh801@yahoo.com
Date: Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 1:01 AM
Subject: Requirement of Principal and Trained Hindi/English/Science/Math teachers

Hi All,

I am re-forwarding my previous mail for teaching staff requirements.

Though, I have been able to meet the current teaching staff requirements for our school by hiring teachers from outside, I am looking for more trained teachers and Principal from next session starting from April 2010.


Would appreciate for passing on this message to the target groups in case you know.

Regards

Raj Singh

Managing Trustee, Vivek Singh Memorial Trust,


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 3:05 PM, Raj Singh <rajsingh801@yahoo.com> wrote:
Dear All,

I am in the look out for the following staff for running the school which has been started last week:

A visionary Principal with an excellent academic experience in developing and managing public school from ground zero level.
Trained Science/Math teacher
Trained English/Hindi teacher
The medium of instruction is english and aspirants should be fully versed with english. They will be required to stay in the school campus. The necessary accomodation and amenities will be provided. Food will be provided in the common mess with the students.

The school is in village surrounding where the campus is being developed on a 12 acres plot, located 15 KM east of Jaynagar Railway station (connected with direct trains from Delhi, Kolkatta, Patna, Muzaffarpur, Samastipur). It is 3 KM south of Khajedih Chauk (on NH104) in Ladhania Block under Madubani District.

Interested may submit their resume at : rajsingh801@yahoo.com
Phone: (0) 9223595078

Salary would not be a limit for a right candidate.

Regards

Raj Singh

Managing Trustee, Vivek Singh Memorial Trust

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Planning Commission's Support Required

Traditional governments in Bihar (in the last 15-25 years before 2005) were not interested in developing the state and therefore we have seen very little per capita development spend in Bihar. Thus while things have been improving in Bihar in the last 4 years, the per capita development spend for the 11th five year plan has only been Rs. 1,446 during 2005-06, Rs. 2,123 during 2006-2007 and Rs. 2,184 during 2007-2008 in comparison to the national average of Rs. 3,049.

While the Indian planning commission has been helpful in supporting the growth strategies of the present government, it has to realize that it is the first time in many many years that a government is putting efforts for the development of Bihar. If Bihar propers, there will be a lesser outflow and migration of people from Bihar in search of a livelyhood. This will definitely have a positive impact not only for India but for the image of the Bihari people who often are at the receiving end of the jokes of people from across India.

With a very high density of population, Bihar would require much more financial resources to accelerate its growth so as to bring the standard of living of people across the state, closer to the national average, in the next five years. Hence it is important for the Planning Commission to support the development efforts of Bihar, even rising above political considerations. The Bihar government has approached the planning commission soliciting their support and the planning commission has been positive in considering the request from the Bihar government. My hope and the hope of majority of the people in Bihar is that the Planning commission will take a sincere and positive look at the demands of Bihar and support Bihar's development efforts and not turn a blind eye to all its requests. By supporting the development efforts, it will improve the lives of crores of people, specially since the highest number of people living below the poverty line are in Bihar.

I am marking a copy of this blog post to Mr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Dy. Chairman of the Planning commission.

Mr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia ji: Do consider the requests of the people of Bihar and provide your extended support to Bihar in the cause of its development efforts. This is the first time in many many years that the people of Bihar have a hope of a better Bihar and your help and consideration will be highly appreciated by all the people of Bihar. If implementation is a concern, please provide development assistance aligned with targeted milestones to continue getting the assitance and I am sure Mr. Nitish Kumar will ensure that these targets are adhered too.

For people who want to read the article on the per capita development GDP spend in Bihar, they can read the Economic Times article at "Bihar has the lowest per capita development spend"

Bihar Progress Report Card - 2009

I have posted the Bihar Progress Report Card - 2009. The report can be downloaded from my home page Bihar's - Change in Destiny and Progress.

I have only briefly glanced at the report and would be studying it in more detail over the next few days and then I will post my views on anything substantial that I find in the report.

I have broken up the report into 3 parts so that people can download it easily. If anyone wants the report as one file, I can also email it to him directly. The report can also be downloaded directly from the companion site of Bihar's - Change in Destiny and Progress