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Sunday, July 29, 2007

UNICEF provides six emergency vehicles for childcare in TN

VILLUPURAM: July. 18 (PTI): Six 'fully-equipped childcare vehicles' worth Rs one crore to transport infants during emergency medical situations from primary health centres to district hospitals were presented by UNICEF to the Tamil Nadu Government today.
The vehicles to be used at primary health centres of Cuddalore, Kancheepuram and Nagapattinam were handed over to Chief Minister M Karunanidhi by the UNICEF officials.
Many of the infants, born in primary health centres, lose their lives while being transported to district hospitals or medical colleges during emergency medical situations due to lack of amenities in vehicles or due to delay, an official press release here said.
To prevent such incidents, vehicles presented by the UNICEF would be pressed into service. They contain all emergency facilities like incubator, pulse oxy-meter, ventilator and equipment to monitor the blood pressure and other conditions.
The vehicles could also be used by pregnant women who could dial the number `1056' to use the facility. A control room also has been formed to receive the calls.
The government would encourage industrialists and others to fund for more vehicles in rural areas of the state, the release added.
The Chief Minister also reviewed the progress of schemes under the health department and instructed the officials to expedite works for cataract operations and for providing free spectacles. He also directed the officials to provide financial assistance for pregnant women without any delay.
It was also decided to expedite work for setting up medical colleges at Villupuram, Dharmapuri and Tiruvarur and construct additional buildings in 235 hospitals.

Commendable act




VILLUPURAM: THE National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) has been a subject of lively debate in the past two years or so. Unfortunately, the factual basis of this debate has been, so far, rather thin. This has made it possible for extremist positions to flourish without being put to the test of careful evidence. While the Act is regularly pilloried in the corporate-sponsored media as an "expensive gravy train" (as a former Chief Economic Adviser described it), the government gets away with extravagant claims of success.
Fortunately, the scope for informed analysis is rapidly growing as reports are beginning to pour in from various parts of the country. Some statistical evidence is also available, notably on the NREGA website launched by the Ministry of Rural Development (http://www.nrega.nic.in/) . This website is not exactly a model of clarity and elegance. Many of the links do not work, quite a few tables are blank, and essential facts that ought to be available at a glance tend to be oddly scattered through the site. More importantly, much of the site is a rather puzzling mix of valuable data and dubious statistics. It is hard to understand why a Ministry that spends more than Rs.10,000 crore a year on implementing the NREGA is unable to ensure that this crucial resource is up to the mark. Be that as it may, there is much to learn here for those who have the patience to find their way through the maze.
Table 1 presents a simple "fact sheet" on the NREGA based on official data from the Ministry's website. The data pertain to the financial year 2006-07, and should be interpreted bearing in mind that this was essentially a "learning phase" for the NREGA. The Act came into force on February 2, 2006 in 200 districts. Many districts were unable to put the required systems in place before the summer months (April to June), which tend to be the period of peak demand for employment in public works. Some of these districts had much higher levels of NREGA employment this summer, but this is not captured in Table 1 since the reference period ends on March 31, 2007. Quite likely, the levels of NREGA expenditure and employment in these 200 districts will be much higher in 2007-08 than in 2006-07 (that is, if the Finance Ministry cooperates). Nevertheless, it is useful to look at the record of the NREGA in "year zero", so to speak.
As Table 1 indicates, works under the NREGA generated 90 crore (nearly one billion) person-days of employment in 2006-07, at a cost of about Rs.9,000 crore. By any reasonable analysis, this is much below the employment and expenditure levels that would materialise if the Act were implemented in letter and spirit. For instance, based on rather conservative assumptions, the National Advisory Council estimated two years ago that fair implementation of the Act in the country's poorest 200 districts would create about 200 crore person-days of employment - more than twice the actual level of employment generation in 2006-07. Nevertheless, 90 crore person-days is a start of sorts, and certainly more - much more - than the amount of employment generated in these districts in earlier years under the National Food For Work Programme (NFFWP) and the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana (SGRY).
K.K.MUSTAFAH Farm workers returning home with grain received as part of their wages, near Thrissur in Kerala. In terms of NREGA performance, Kerala is at the bottom of the table. Perhaps this is a reflection of the low demand for NREGA employment in the State rather than of a failure to provide it.
Having said this, there are startling differences in the levels of the NREGA employment in different States. The point is illustrated in Table 2, where States are ranked in descending order of employment generated per rural household (in the relevant districts). Some State governments have clearly decided to "own" the NREGA and have seized this opportunity to provide large-scale employment to the rural poor at the cost of the Central government (which foots about 90 per cent of the bill). In other States, the whole programme is yet to take off.
Looking first at the top of the scale, it is perhaps not surprising to find that Rajasthan was the best performer among all major States in 2006-07 (in terms of employment generation per rural household). Indeed, employment guarantee has been a lively political issue in Rajasthan for quite a few years now, and the State also had a high level of preparedness for the Act, having organised massive public works programmes almost every year in living memory. Note, however, that the small State of Tripura in northeastern India (not shown in the table) is doing even better than Rajasthan, with 87 days of NREGA employment per rural household in 2006-07. In both States, employment generation under NREGA is already quite close to the upper limit of "100 days per rural household". This is an unprecedented achievement in the history of social security in India.
At the other end of the scale, there are some surprises. Kerala is at the rock bottom, but perhaps this is partly a reflection of the low demand for the NREGA employment in the State, rather than of a failure to provide it. The same interpretation, however, is unlikely to apply to Maharashtra and West Bengal. The fact that the NREGA is - as of now - a flop in both States may seem surprising, but it is actually in line with recent policy priorities. Maharashtra has assiduously sabotaged its own Employment Guarantee Scheme from the early 1990s onwards. The government of West Bengal, for its part, had an ambivalent attitude towards the NREGA from the beginning.
There is another way of looking at the State ranking in Table 2. As is well known, the southern and western States (Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu) routinely do better than most of the northern and eastern States when it comes to social policy and rural development programmes. The large north Indian States, for their part, tend to lag far behind. But when it comes to NREGA, the pattern is reversed: only one of the southern or western States (Karnataka) has generated more than 10 person-days of employment per rural household in 2006-07, while the eastern and northern States have done comparatively well in this respect. Of course, this pattern has to be read in the light of the fact that the need for fallback employment may be greater in the eastern and northern regions. Nevertheless, it is encouraging to find that the NREGA made an early start in these deprived regions (with the significant exceptions of Bihar and West Bengal).

Is NREGA doing better in States ruled by particular political parties? No obvious pattern emerges in this respect. Nevertheless there is a hint that, if any national political party is taking the NREGA seriously, it is the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Indeed, among the major States, the four best performers in terms of employment generation under NREGA are Rajasthan, Assam, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, all of which, except Assam, had BJP governments in 2006-07. As it happens, Assembly elections are due relatively soon in Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. One wonders whether active implementation of the NREGA in these States is part of a deliberate electoral strategy of the BJP. It would be a cruel irony if the BJP were to reap the political benefits of a programme initially championed by the Congress and the Left parties.
Empowering Women
The last three columns of Table 2 look at other features of the implementation of the NREGA in different States and enable us, in particular, to spot some important irregularities. Consider, for instance, the participation of women in the NREGA. It is encouraging to note that women's share of NREGA employment is not far from half (40 per cent to be precise) at the all-India level, rising to a startling 81 per cent in Tamil Nadu. The economic dependence of women on men in rural India plays a major role in the subjugation of women, and in this respect the NREGA is an important tool of social change. However, many States are violating the Act by failing to ensure that the share of women in NREGA employment is at least one third: Jammu and Kashmir (4 per cent only), Himachal Pradesh (12 per cent) and Uttar Pradesh (17 per cent) among others. In this connection, it is also worth mentioning that the mandate to provide crèche facilities at NREGA worksites has been brazenly ignored so far almost everywhere. Better arrangements for child care are urgently required to facilitate the participation of women in the NREGA. Of course, it is not just a matter of child care. But the provision of crèche facilities at NREGA worksites would certainly help and would also have much value as a means of creating wider social acceptance of child care arrangements as a basic right of working women.
The labour component of the NREGA is supposed to account for at least 60 per cent of total expenditure. As Table 2 indicates, this requirement is comfortably met in most States, though some of them (Bihar, Jharkhand, Orissa and Uttar Pradesh, for instance) have marginally lower ratios, and Himachal Pradesh spends only 52 per cent of NREGA funds on the labour component. It would be interesting to know how States like Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu manage to implement NREGA works with virtually no expenditure other than wages. Of course, there is a strong incentive for States to adopt labour-intensive techniques under the NREGA since the labour component is entirely funded by the Central government (unlike the material component, which is shared). The share of wages at the all-India level is 66 per cent, which seems like a satisfactory figure.
The last column in Table 2 presents average wage costs per person-day. This is, for practical purposes, the same as the average wage rate (in rupees per day). Here again, there are major inter-State variations, with (say) Kerala paying more than twice as much as Rajasthan. These large differences raise the question whether it is better to have State-specific wages or a national norm. This complex matter is yet to be adequately debated. Indeed, wage payments raise a host of interesting and complex questions that have been lost in the din of arguments for and against the Act: how NREGA wages should be determined; whether there should be a national norm; whether piece-rate payments are better than daily-wage payments; how work should be measured; whether the "schedule of rates" should be gender-specific; how to avoid long delays in the payment of wages; and so on. It is not too late to initiate an informed debate on these issues.
Minimum wage
Finally, it is alarming to find that some States are evidently paying less than the statutory minimum wage, in flagrant violation of the Act. The most glaring offender in this respect is none other than Rajasthan, where NREGA workers earned a meagre Rs.51 a day on an average in 2006-07 even though the statutory minimum wage was Rs.73 a day. This is a trifle paradoxical, since workers' organisations in Rajasthan have been at the forefront of recent struggles for minimum wages. Also, it is in the context of relief works in Rajasthan that the Supreme Court delivered a landmark judgment stating that employing labourers without paying the minimum wage is "forced labour" insofar as it amounts to "[taking] advantage of the helpless condition of the affected persons" (Sanjit Roy vs. State of Rajasthan 1983, SCC (1) 525). More than 20 years after this indictment, the problem persists.

As one might expect, the contrasts discussed so far are even sharper at the district level. For instance, employment generation per rural household is just about one person-day in Madhubani (Bihar) but as high as 111 days in Dungarpur district (Rajasthan). Similarly, while women's share of NREGA employment is above 80 per cent in most districts of Tamil Nadu, it is less than one per cent in five districts of Uttar Pradesh. The inter-district contrasts are illustrated in the graphic, with reference to the level of NREGA employment (measured, as before, in terms of person-days per rural household).
Behind these facts and figures is a simple yet powerful message about the NREGA. Within a year of the Act coming into force, the programme has been actively taken up in a small but significant number of districts (20 of them spent more than Rs.100 crore on NREGA in 2006-07). Further, field reports suggest that many of the anticipated benefits of employment guarantee are beginning to show in these pioneer districts: there is greater economic security, agricultural wages are rising, migration is slowing down, productive assets are being created, women have more economic independence, power equations are changing, and so on. The need of the hour is to extend these positive experiences to other districts. If Sarguja or Mandla or Banswara are able to spend more than Rs.100 crore on this programme in a single year, there is no reason why (say) Palamau or Kalahandi should not be able to do it.
Of course, it is also important to ensure that the reported expenditure levels actually correspond to "real" work and wages. Earlier employment programmes have left a long trail of fake muster rolls and embezzled money. However, there is growing evidence that firm enforcement of NREGA's extensive transparency safeguards can go a long way in preventing corruption.
T.SINGARAVELOU Women engaged in deepening a water source in Bommiarpalayam panchayat in Villupuram district in Tamil Nadu under the NREGA programme. Women's share of NREGA employment is 40 per cent at the all-India level; in Tamil Nadu it is a startling 81 per cent.
Success stories in this respect are no longer confined to Rajasthan - the stronghold of India's "right to information movement". For instance, a recent verification of muster rolls in Sarguja and Koriya districts (of Chhattisgarh) conducted by students from Delhi University and Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, found that 95 per cent of the wages paid according to the muster rolls had actually been received by the concerned labourers. This is a significant achievement, especially in contrast with the massive levels of fraud observed in the same area two years ago under the NFFWP.
It would be naive to think that the long history of fraud in public works programmes has already come to an end. But recent experience shows that it is possible to remove mass corruption from NREGA. This calls for strict implementation of the transparency safeguards, as well as firm action whenever corruption is exposed. In these simple steps lies the future of the Act, and of all those for whom it is a new ray of hope.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Prices of most vegetables come down



VILLUPURAM: After ruling high for over a month, prices of most vegetables have dipped in the city.
But staple vegetables such as onion, potato and tomato still cost comparatively more than the other vegetables at the Koyambedu wholesale market. While onion and potatoes are priced between Rs.12 and Rs.13 a kg, tomatoes cost Rs.10 to Rs.12.
Green peas are sold at a relatively high price of Rs.50 per kg. Butter beans cost Rs.70 a kg, the high cost being attributed to a poor yield in Udhagamandalam. Vendors at the market said the prices of these vegetables might not come down until next month when the harvest season would begin.Silver lining
The silver lining, however, is that the prices of most common vegetables have come down from the levels in June. The selling price of beans at Koyambedu has declined to Rs.15 from Rs.20; carrots and lady’s fingers also cost less now at Rs.16 and Rs.7 per kg from Rs. 25 and Rs. 9 respectively.
The price of green chillies has also dropped to Rs.8 from Rs.15 a kg.
There is a slight decrease in the prices of bitter gourd, drumstick and yam, which are now selling at Rs.8 per kg. Cauliflower, which was sold at Rs.15 a few days ago, is sold at more than half the price, at Rs.6.
Brinjal appears to be the most popular and cheapest vegetable now with the sales touching around 150 tonnes every day. It is priced between Rs.7 and Rs.8 a kg. Vendors noted that the price would further dip to Rs.3 per kg next week with bulk supplies expected from Andhra Pradesh.
Koyambedu MMC Licence Holders Merchants Association secretary V. R. Soundararajan said that the cost of some vegetables such as lady’s finger and snake gourd had dropped as their arrivals from other parts of the State had improved. Tindivanam, Villupuram, Gummidipoondi and Tiruvallur are some of the locations from where these vegatables come.
The wholesale price drop is also reflected in the retail market with the prices of some vegetables, including beans (Rs.18) and brinjal (Rs.16) being less than the previous month’s rates. However, the cost of carrot was relatively higher at Rs.32 per kg. Potatoes and tomatoes were priced at Rs.18 a kg.
Among fruits, mangoes have given way to oranges. The fruit of the season is flooding the wholesale market and selling at Rs.12 a kg (wholesale) and at Rs.20 to Rs.25 (retail).

Friday, July 13, 2007

Sivaji is still the boss in South






Sivaji: The Boss (Tamil: சிவாஜி) is a 2007 Tamil language film, directed by S. Shankar and stars Tamil Superstar Rajinikanth, Shriya, Vivek and Suman in the lead roles. Nayantara, Manivannan, Raghuvaran and Shankar himself are some of the other actors credited with appearance in the movie. The film's score and soundtrack was written and composed by A. R. Rahman, with lyrics from four lyricists. The movie was announced in October 2005 with release initially planned for 2007 Tamil New Year release. After it was delayed atleast a couple of times, the release was postponed one more time due to post-production delays and was released world-wide on June 15, 2007. the movie was released in 2 langauges (Tamil as well as the dubbed version in Telugu) on June 15, 2007 in an estimated 850 to 1000 theatres worldwide.


The movie is estimated to be the costliest Indian production to date; with budget estimates ranging from costing about Rs. 70 to 96 Crores (including Rajinikanth's salary of 16 crores. Translating into USD, the budget of the movie is estimated between $17.5 million to $24 million with $4 million being the salary of Rajinikanth. The movie is Rajinikanth's 100th Tamil movie and has opened to tremendous box-office reception across the globe.

Sivaji is still the boss in South




Three weeks into screening and still there is no waning of the popularity and craze for Rajnikant's Sivaji - the Boss . Only a few small films, with unknown faces, have been released in the last couple of weeks, which have failed to create any ripple at the box office.

Sivaji is still the talk of the town.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Ponmudy inspects works in Villupuram district


VILLUPURAM: Higher Education Minister K. Ponmudy has undertaken an extensive tour in the district to inspect the ongoing works and to interact with representatives of local bodies.
Mr. Ponmudy also met beneficiaries of Government schemes and the public to ascertain their needs.
During his visit, along with District Collector Brajendra Navnit to Kappiampuliyur on Tuesday, the people urged the Minister to make arrangement for deepening the tank.
They said that the silt deposit for over 40 years had made the tank shallow, thereby seriously eroding its holding capacity. After listening to their suggestions, the Minister directed the officials to do the needful. At the Vikkiravandi town bus stand, the Minister inspected the improvement works, including the laying of cement road.
He instructed the officials to ensure that the contractors adhered to quality norms. At Ma. Kuppam, he inspected the road works being executed at a cost of Rs.16 lakh provided by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development .
At Palaiyur, a school building with 17 blocks was under construction with a financial assistance of Rs.78 lakh extended by the NABARD. At Panaiyur, the Minister inspected the tank desilting works undertaken at a cost of Rs 3 lakh.
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