"CSR can be very hard for employees to relate to if we don't make it tangible to their everyday working lives."
Monday, 15 December 2014
Thursday, 27 November 2014
A tremendous social responsibility
comes with being a successful public performer.-A.
Bartlett Giamatti.
Saturday, 15 November 2014
Thursday, 6 November 2014
Saturday, 23 August 2014
CSR Awards
CSR is an idea whereby companies integrate economic, social and environmental concerns in their business operations.
Monday, 7 July 2014
Petrol Pricing Enigma
Petrol price hikes are a mystery.
The consuming public is told that prices need to go up either because the USD
has appreciated or Rupee has depreciated or international crude prices have
gone up. On the face of it this is a very likely explanation. The only problem
is that the data does not support it. I did a back of the envelope calculation,
using data from the internet. I looked at the data from 1st August
2013 to 1st July 2014. The window was chosen to illustrate the
problem. I choose Brent Crude – the
Indian crude basket is priced lower than Brent. Take a look:
Date
|
Petrol In Mumbai
|
USD/INR
|
Brent Crude in USD
|
1/8/2013
|
78.61
|
60.75
|
109.94
|
1/9/2013
|
81.57
|
65.71
|
115.49
|
14/09/2013
|
83.62
|
63.29
|
113.31
|
4/1/2014
|
81.31
|
62.18
|
106.71
|
1/3/2014
|
82.07
|
61.83
|
111.26
|
16/04/2014
|
80
|
60.25
|
109.71
|
1/7/2014
|
81.75
|
60.06
|
111.03
|
Get the picture? Take a point to
point comparison. On 1st August 2013, USD was at 60.75 and crude at USD
109.94. Petrol in Mumbai was available at INR 78.61. On 1st July
2014, USD was at 60.06 and Brent Crude at 111.03. Petrol price in Mumbai is at
INR 81.75. What is the reason for this hike?
Between, 1st September
2013 and 14th September 2013, USD went down from 65.71 to 63.29, and
the Brent crude from USD 115.49 to USD 113.31. But petrol prices went up from
INR 81.57 to INR 83.62!
Is this a rip off? Are we being
exploited by the oil ministry on behalf of the oil marketers? While nothing has
changed in the international markets, the prices in India keep moving up. As
consumers we need to know how these prices are calculated.
If the government is conscious of
the poor it needs to do one small gesture – fix the consolidated levies and
duties from sale of fuel. As it is nearly 47% of the price of petrol at the
pump is tax. Every time either the USD or oil price goes up, so does the tax.
Fix the tax at a moderate level. Imagine paying 47% tax!
Or better still abolish fuel
subsidy and these obnoxious taxes at one stroke. Why levy a tax and then
provide a subsidy. Let the fuel price move in step with international rates.
This will help our economy grow and for the government, taxes too will grow!
Girish V S
Managing Editor
Friday, 30 May 2014
To Feed a Hungry Mouth
In the run up to the BFSI Vision CSR Awards 2014, I pause to think
of one of the core areas of CSR – poverty eradication. One question that haunts
me is – can the BFSI sector do something about a sustainable poverty
eradication campaign? Can we from the sector lead the way in this cause? To an
extent, there is continuity in our theme – last week we spoke about women
empowerment. This week it is poverty eradication. If we achieve the former, the
latter is bound to happen.
We are so caught up in the dreams of a better tomorrow, that we
forget the millions of our country men go to sleep hungry. We are a nation of
paradoxes. We buy a huge amount of grain from the farmers and then promptly let
it rot. At a conservative estimate, nearly 40 percent of our food crops are
wasted for want of better supply chains. How different are we from the avowed
capitalists who do not baulk at destroying food because it will reduce prices.
I recall the top three issues listed in the top ten priorities for poverty
eradication by the UN. According to the UN, “eradication of poverty cannot be
brought about by charity, but needs first and foremost empowering the poor,
focusing on women, and tapping their tremendous potential.” The next on the
list is “Women fall into poverty more easily and more frequently than men. They
constitute majority of the people living in poverty. Ending discrimination
against women and girls and promoting gender equality were critical for poverty
eradication.” And the third “Productive employment, including self-employment,
played a central role in poverty eradication. Access of the poor to land,
capital and other productive resources must be improved.”
For me the agenda is clear. These three points are what we call
“Financial Inclusion” – aimed at providing women across the country with the
means to start small income generation schemes. But we seem to forget that the
income generation schemes under the financial inclusion program are limited in
their scope – they are limited to the village ecosystem. The poor connectivity
between Indian villages traps them in islands of human habitation, limiting the
market size. Whatever is produced has to be consumed within the village. The
villager is not able to transport her produce to larger markets, and if she
attempts to do so, nearly half the produce is wasted.
For the villages to reap the benefits of the financial inclusion
program, they need to be connected to the towns and cities. Their produce
should be able to reach the consumption centres without nearly half of it being
wasted.
Hopefully, the new government will make linking of villages a
priority – else, the silent poor majority in Bharat will continue to envy the
urban India progress.
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
The Birth of BFSI Vision CSR Awards
BFSI Vision was founded with the objective of providing members of
the BFSI community a platform to exchange ideas and push the boundaries of
knowledge. Along the way we did have our own share of learnings. After the crisis
of 2008, the BFSI sector and banking in particular came under severe criticism
– from being described as parasites to being greedy – the sector faced all
these allegations. However, while interacting with the Indian BFSI sector, I
was struck by the singular pursuit of social wellbeing practiced by them. Take
for example the Buldana Urban Co-operative Credit Society Ltd – a credit
society started by Radheshyam Chandak,
a self confessed money lender who transformed the lives of farmers and the
disadvantaged people in and around Buldana. Buldana Urban today runs schools,
warehouses, builds roads and in general has played a great part in revitalizing
the economy of Buldana. Or take the case of the big daddy of them all – The
State Bank of India which has founded the SBI youth for India – a movement
founded by SBI to channel the energy of willing urban youth to work for rural
India to transform the rural ecosystem. There are countless examples of how the
Indian BFSI sector has showed its humane face. The greed and arrogance that
destroyed livelihoods in the developed world were by and large absent in India . The
Indian institutions have shown the world that we can be profitable with a human
touch.
I was humbled by the sheer number
of schemes and efforts of the Indian BFSI Sector to help develop the Indian
under privileged. And what better way of celebrating this unique facet of the
Indian BFSI sector, other than to recognize their efforts by instituting a
series of awards for the best and most deserving of our institutions – a series
of awards aimed only at the BFSI sector firms.
The idea of the BFSI Vision CSR
Awards was born. A series of awards aimed at celebrating the human side of the
Indian BFSI sector. An award to inspire us for greater glory. To lend the award its credibility, we roped in
Ashvin Parekh Advisory Services – a boutique advisory services in the BFSI
space to be our knowledge partner, and to audit our processes. To make it free
from any bias we may have, we decided to stay away from the jury. The jury will
be chosen by APAS and not by us. We have a stellar jury lined up.
The award process is under way. We
will shortly open the nomination process. And we look forward to your
participation. Over the next few weeks, we will examine various facets of the
CSR activities of the BFSI sector. We will start the series with the theme of
“Women’s Empowerment” Meanwhile please do write to us if you know of any
initiative that has caught your attention. We will like to feature it.
Let the process begin.
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