Tuesday, June 28, 2011


Should Ratan Tata advise Mukesh Ambani about how to use his wealth?

A couple of days ago famous industrialist Ratan Tata commented about the lavish life style of another billionaire business tycoon Mukesh Ambani quoting his 27 storied Mumbai house viz., Antilla. Tata said that Mukesh Ambani's house Antilla represents the rich Indian's lack of empathy for the poor. His remarks: "The person who lives in there should be concerned about what he sees around him and [asking] can he make a difference. If he is not, then it's sad because this country needs people to allocate some of their enormous wealth to finding ways of mitigating the hardship that people have." 

Is Ratan Tata right in his remarks or is he misguided in his judgements? Is he aware about the role of an entrepreneur in an economy or is he ignorant of this basic economic fact? Or is his remarks has some underlying assumptions which make those remarks perfectly apt for Mukesh's lifestyle? Let me deal with these questions one by one. I take two scenarios to carry out my analysis. In first scenario we assume that Mukesh Ambani is an honest entrepreneur and his profit comes from the market competition. In second scenario we assume that, Mukesh is not an honest entrepreneur and his profit comes from his business ties with government officials and his manipulation of the system of State. We see the implications of Ratan Tata's remarks under both these scenarios.

Scene 1: Mukesh is an honest entrepreneur
I first make an assertion and then go onto prove it. If Mukesh is an honest entrepreneur then his profit - which he earned in the market competition - is absolutely legitimate, and if he don't desire to do a philanthropist work then that is his voluntary choice. Ratan Tata has no right whatsoever to advise Mukesh about allocating his honestly hard earned wealth amongst the poor people or to comment on his lavish lifestyle.

As Ludwig von Mises explained, the only way in which an entrepreneur can make profit in the market competition is by serving and fulfilling the most urgent wants of his customers in the best possible way, and that best possible way is of providing top quality goods at the lowest possible price. Only those entrepreneurs succeed and make profit in the market process who can ascertain and fulfill the subjective wants of customers in the best way compared to his counterparts. 

By producing and selling top quality goods at a lowest possible price successful entrepreneurs allow even the very poor people to buy his products. By allowing them to buy his products he lifts their standard of living; he lifts them out of their poverty even without raising their nominal meager income. That happens because with the falling prices in the market with the same amount of nominal income people can now buy more goods and services i.e., their real income rises. And no sane person will deny that this is the real way of increasing prosperity in the society; this is the true way of eliminating poverty and lifting the standard of living of millions of poor people. 

Philanthropy, about which Ratan Tata is advising Mukesh, will only help poor people in a very short run i.e., for the urgent immediate consumption purposes. Such help to poor people will actually harm them in the long run by making them dependent on such easy free money. It will not cultivate any habit of hard work and independent living in those people. Redistributing the income will only exacerbate the problem of poverty because human nature is such that most people will always prefer the free goods. Such allocation of rich peoples' income will make everyone of us poor too because rich people play an important role of providing essential savings for the economy. And without savings it is impossible to sustain a labor population in present time which is involved in production of intermediate capital goods. And without capital goods it is impossible to increase the future production of final consumption goods, and without that progress (so-called growth) is not possible. Capitalist class - which includes people coming from all strata of society, and not just rich - plays a pivotal role of supplying this saving. If they are forced to allocate their saving to poor people, who will mostly use it for immediate consumption, then society and economy cannot progress and without progress everyone of us will be poor one day for sure.

And people should not forget another vital economic truth that, honest entrepreneur do not become rich by exploiting the public, but they are made rich by their consumers i.e., the same public. Consumers voluntarily buy the products sold by such sellers because they prefer their products over other sellers. And in this process they give their portion of income to these entrepreneurs making them rich in turn. Profit is a signal that the businessman is fulfilling the most urgent wants of his consumers in a best possible way, and that's why he is rich. On the other hand those entrepreneurs who make losses are not fulfilling consumers' wants properly and so they remain poor in turn by going broke! (to deeply understand the beautiful system of profit & loss I will advise my readers to read Mises' wonderful book, Profit and Loss).     
 
So, if Mukesh is an honest entrepreneur then he has all the rights to keep and use his profit in whatever way he wants to. 

Scene 2: Mukesh is a dishonest entrepreneur
But, if Mukesh Ambani is a dishonest entrepreneur and his profit comes solely from his friendships with the government bureaucrats and politicians then he has no right whatsoever on his wealth. Profit generated by such dishonest political maneuvering is immoral. In a system of government such businessmen are working not to serve their consumers but only to serve the politicians and bureaucrats who help them in restricting the market competition. They actively lobby government so to establish their monopolies in the market. Through these monopolies then they fleece the consumers. And because their profit depends on exploiting the political system they don't care about their consumers. In fact they go to any length to harm their consumers for making such illegitimate and immoral profits. 

This type of system is historically known as 'fascism' and sadly in today's world most of the businessmen, especially the big business houses are making their fat profits by this way only.

If Mukesh Ambani (also Ratan Tata and all others) is doing his business in cahoot with the government officials then his profit is illegitimate. If one day India becomes truly a free country then he should be stripped of his illegal profits (property) and should be convicted and punished for his crimes against the people. He and all such dishonest business tycoons should be incarcerated, may be hanged.       

Conclusion
Looking at these economic facts, if Tata and Mukesh both are honest businessmen and they really want to help people of this country then instead of  allocating their profit to the poor people they should use that capital in producing top quality goods at the lowest possible price. They should try to provide as many economic goods as possible to people of India through market competition. Tata and Mukesh both can profit by serving the needs of poor people. There exists a thriving market even in remotest rural poor areas of the world as C. K. Prahalad has shown. All capable entrepreneurs (existing and new ones) should provide top quality private schools, hospitals, private roads, electricity, water works, sanitation, home etc. goods in these areas at the lowest possible price. That will be the best possible moral way of making a difference in poor peoples' lives; that is the only way in which these entrepreneurs can help the poor in mitigating their hardships. Allocation/redistribution of wealth will only result in misery for all of us.   

1 comments:

kapil69 said...
it's not about being honest/dishonest? it's about show-off lavish life style in a locality which is deprived & it doesn't make sense at all. Every entrepreneur can't be like Bill Gates, i agree & there is no need to be. Ambani can purchase Al Burj or anything like that, nobody will ever comment on that.

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Monday, January 18, 2010

Jyoti Basu

Chronology of Jyoti Basu's life

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KOLKATA: Jyoti Basu, who died here Sunday, resigned from active politics in 2000 but continued to guide the communist movement in India. (

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Following is a chronology of his life: ( Watch Video )

- Born in Calcutta (now Kolkata), July 8, 1914.

- Graduated from Presidency College with honours in English. He did his Bar at Law from London where he got introduced to Marxism and politics.

- Returned to India in 1940. Joined Communist Party of India (CPI).

- In 1944 he was a functionary of Bengal railway workers' union.

- In 1946 he was elected to the Bengal legislative assembly, defeating Humayun Kabir of Congress.

- He won from Baranagar assembly constituency in 1952, 1957, 1962, 1967, 1969 and 1971. He lost the seat in the 1972 snap polls.

- In 1964, he helped set up the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M).

- In 1967, he became deputy chief minister in a coalition government in Bengal.

- Became chief minister of West Bengal June 21, 1977 and headed the Left Front government till Nov 6, 2000.

- Narrowly missed a chance to become India's prime minister in 1996 after his party's veto. He later called the party decision a "historic blunder".

- In 2000, he announced his retirement from active politics and stepped down as chief minister on health grounds.

- In 2004, he played a key role to stitch an alliance between the Left parties and the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA).
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A tall man in Indian politics| Read By basab on 18/01/2010 at 09:26 pm
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one a Committed COMMUNIST and the other a SOCIALIST

George: From Giant Killer to lonely Bhishma


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In the din of Parliament, it was a despairing sight that could only evoke pity and sadness: the once mighty George Fernandes struggling to take his oath as a Rajya Sabha member.

He couldn't speak, could barely walk, this was a lion in the winter of life being almost pushed to perform one last time on the big stage.

He was obviously ill, needed to be cared for, but instead was being asked to defy age and poor health. The only question that many of us who had tracked the controversial, but always charismatic politician could ask was: is this how a senior public figure must fade away?

George Fernandes, after all, is a life story that few Bollywood scripts would be able to match. The teenager who was sent to a seminary to train as a priest, but then rebelled and became a trade union activist instead. The young man who came to Mumbai with eight annas in his pocket, slept on the pavement and then built a workers movement that would bring the country's commercial capital to a halt. The flamboyant politician who became 'George the Giant Killer' after he defeated Mumbai's reigning political badshah SK Patil in the 1967 elections. The ultimate anti-establishment hero during the Emergency, it was the image of a George in chains that became symbolic of the political repression of the period.

Through all the twists and turns, from being the fiery socialist who drove out Coca Cola to being an NDA fellow-traveller, from leading anti-corruption agitations to being accused of corruption in defence deals, George Fernandes enjoyed the arclights, relished a challenge, took pride in being perhaps the last political iconoclast (who else but George as the country's defence minister would have allowed his official residence to be used as a home for Burmese and Tibetan rebels?). And yet, today, at the age of 79, Fernandes is being reduced to a pathetic lonely figure, a cruel reminder of how nothing is permanent in life.

The Bihar chief minister, Nitish Kumar has hinted that the decision to make 'Georgesaab' a Rajya Sabha member was a form of 'guru-dakshina' to a mentor. Admirable sentiments, although only a few months earlier, Nitish had refused to give a Lok Sabha ticket to his 'guru', saying he was too ill. Are we then to understand that the Rajya Sabha, or the council of elders, is an old-age retirement home, much like the Raj Bhavans have become? The larger question: do our politicians have a retirement age, or are they expected to soldier on till the very end?

Let me suggest that Indian politics (like much of our society) is trapped in a Bhishma Pitamah syndrome. Many senior citizens may beg to differ, but most Indians do rightfully revere and respect the aged? The idea of a pater familias who will be our compass through life is a powerful one; we expect our elders to offer wisdom gleaned from experience. But an over-emphasis on age is also proving debilitating to a young society. In our search for Bhishma-like figures, we are allowing a certain fatigue to creep into our system and preventing the next generation from questioning the status quo. Its almost as if Indians crave for a strong man at the helm, even if this means a geriatric man at the helm.

Take the Indian left for example. Part of the problem is that there has been little attempt to re-energise their leadership, to allow newer voices to emerge. A Jyoti Basu could perhaps have continued as West Bengal chief minister and politburo member for an eternity, simply because there was a lurking fear within the Marxist ranks of what life would be like without Jyotibabu at the helm. The West Bengal left patriarch eventually opted out himself, but how many others are willing to say goodbye?.

Family-run regional parties, driven by the cult of personality, are particularly prone to being unable to shake off the burden of age. An octogenarian Karunanidhi must stay on, even if he is confined to a wheelchair, out of concern that his 'retirement' from politics will spark off a succession war. A Bal Thackeray must still be the face of the Shiv Sena, even if he is too physically weak to campaign, because he alone commands the authority to hold the party together.

Even the two major national parties are facing a similar predicament. The BJP's failure to effect a smooth generational transfer of leadership is partly because the party has been so dependent on the Vajpayee-Advani duo for more than four decades that it cannot quite come to terms with a situation where its two principal leaders are no longer around. Vajpayee's health has reached a stage where he can only hold symbolic value for the party. Advani is a remarkably fit 81, but his decision to retire at the end of the year has once again left the BJP struggling to identify a leader who can carry forward the Hindutva torch.

The Congress, on the other hand, may have identified Rahul Gandhi as their next generation leader, but the formation of the Manmohan Singh cabinet only confirms the compulsions of having to accommodate political "seniors". If it was the image of an ageing Arjun Singh which haunted the first UPA government, this time its 77 year old SM Krishna who is struggling to cope up with the demands of a high-profile ministry.

This is not to suggest that the answer lies by simply effecting a radical generational shift in our politics. Many of our 'young' MPs are still beneficiaries of being members of political dynasties, and have not really earned their spurs in the rough and tumble of public life. Give me a 'wise' Pranab Mukherjee any day over some of our camera-friendly but still raw young MPs.

The real solution lies in moving away from a feudal attachment to age to a modern commitment to ideas. Choose MPs, ministers, indeed, any professional leader, on the basis of their ability to generate new thoughts and implement them successfully, irrespective of their age.

A George Fernandes will be remembered because he gave the trade union movement in the 60s a certain dynamism and spirited leadership. A George Fernandes will not be remembered because he chose the sinecure of a Rajya Sabha membership despite failing health.