Mr sekar observation cannot be Gainward. However industry cannot be started
by every one even if 90% loan is given. There shall be a back ground so to
do and sustain. Thie would apply equally in any nation. One in a lakh alone
turns a vivek ramasamy or app siva nadar. Ofcourse brain in India is
strained by various factors. But abroad pain is rewarding by money value K
Rajaram IRS

On Sat, Sep 23, 2023, 2:42 PM Narayanaswamy Sekar <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ---------
> From: 'N Sekar' via iyer123 <[email protected]>
> Date: Sat, Sep 23, 2023 at 1:10 PM
> Subject: [iyer123] Re: Snippets - Sitendrakumar - Emigration to foreign
> countries
>
>
>
> Thanks for this interesting forward Sri. Chittanandam.
>
> Problem is in spite of the promise that Bharat holds, there are so many
> reasons why people emigrate:
>
> 1. Although we have moved away from the socialist, " License and Quota
> Raj" , still we have not given it up altogether. The Chairman of Team Lease
> mentioned a couple of years ago that there are not less than a thousand
> (more in fact) permits required before one can start a company - and
> thousands more to comply with, on an annual basis. He said more than a
> thousand (central, state, local) rules and forms need to be complied with
> on an annual basis and he was not contradicted in the interview. He added
> it is impossible to fully comply with all the Rules and Regulations.
>
> Politicians and Bureaucrats have a vested interest to keep these archaic
> live as it helps them to retain their powers so people can continue to say
> " yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir".
>
> There are a few honourable exceptions though.
>
> We are still a bureaucratic Nation in spite of the many reforms since
> 2014.  Anand Mahindra said while corruption at the Central level is non
> existent since 2014, the same cannot be said about the states.
>
> *No honest person can survive and thrive in this environment*. Just see
> the shoddy work of the roads, bridges etc. where contracts are awarded for
> a consideration and not on merits.
>
> To cut a long, long, sob, sad story short:
>
> *I think the Tamizh film Indian said it beautifully when it said:*
>
> *In all other countries one has to give a bribe to get what one is NOT
> entitled to*
>
> *But in India*
>
> *We have to give bribes even to get our Rights.*
>
> This reason alone is enough to justify migration although there are a
> thousand other reasons like Reservations (Affirmative Action, though fully
> justified) going beyond all limits, vote bank politics etc.
>
> One telling example is how many of the IAS and IFS cadre's children (if
> they are not in the same cadre here) are in U S and Europe - the framers of
> the rules themselves know how bad the system is and that's s why they send
> their children abroad.
>
> The list is endless.  Right question to ask is how we shine in spite of
> this system -may be because of the innate nature of the Indians, jugaad or
> whatever else you choose to call it.
>
> N Sekar
>
>
> On Saturday, September 23, 2023 at 02:28:06 AM GMT+4, Chittanandam V R <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *Received from Shri Sitendra Kumar*
>
> *                                     The pull of greener pastures*
>
> *Vijay Sabharwal*
>
> *There is big talk of India’s high-growth trajectory. The world is
> apparently acknowledging our continuing rise in the comity of nations,
> epitomised recently by the nation’s G20 presidency. So, it is with a sense
> of irony that I look at the full-page advertisements in newspapers
> showcasing services for providing a ‘one-way ticket’ to foreign shores.
> These advertisements show smiling young individuals looking excited about
> their overseas prospects.*
> *These two narratives are in contradiction. If India is witnessing such
> rapid economic growth, why are our youth fleeing in droves? In my native
> village Bagthala (Kurukshetra), where my family has owned farmlands for
> generations, a trickle has turned into a torrent of youngsters headed off
> to Europe, Canada, Australia, etc. Over 200 youths from the village alone
> have emigrated, never to return, and their family bungalows here are either
> locked up or being used by servants-turned-caretakers.*
>
> *Kurukshetra city itself — famous as the land of the Mahabharata, and now
> as an agrarian centre — has morphed into a leading hub of student
> emigration. In local parlance, the business of arranging emigration papers
> is called ‘kabootarbaazi’, offering an insight into the practices that are
> often not above board.*
>
> *Paid advertisements and news articles on ‘endless’ opportunities
> presented by emigration abound in newspapers. Sometimes, local politicians
> are featured congratulating students and their parents on having secured
> travel visas for destinations abroad — never mind the course of study or
> what professional opportunities are in store. The most in-demand test for
> many of these students no longer pertains to engineering or medicine, as
> was the case in ‘old India’; it is now IELTS, the English language
> proficiency exam, followed by any course that can guarantee them a pathway
> out of the country.*
>
> *It is not that the interest of students (and parents) in overseas career
> opportunities is a recent phenomenon. Darshan Singh of the Lubana community
> was the first to go to Germany from Bagthala in 1965. He was followed by so
> many eager youths that an entire locality in the village is now known as
> ‘Germany da dera’ (German camp).*
>
> *However, the scale of this exodus across both rural and urban communities
> in the country today is unparalleled. If India is the country of growth and
> opportunities, why are our youth lining up to head for the low-growth and
> high-inflation countries? What explains this paradox — are our youth
> misinformed or are all these dazzling economic indicators flattering to
> deceive?*
>
> *- Vijay Sabharwal*
>
> **************************************
>
> *Chittanandam*
>
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