Saturday, August 15, 2015

Open Letter to Delhi CM Mr. Arvind Kejriwal

Dear Mr. Arvind Kejriwal,


Hope this letter finds you in good health and spirit. I am a Delhite and now an NRI living in Singapore. I have been a supporter of AAP and always tried to convince people to vote for a change, fight against corruption - in short vote for Shri Arvind Kejriwal. I understand it is still early days of your government in Delhi however I feel not positive with the mandate that me and my fellow Delhites gave. If you get 5-10 mins pls read through below and if possible do reply and clarify if I misunderstood AAP and its actions.

1. Freebies - Right from Day 1, I have heard a lot about giving freebies. Water, internet, electricity, 50 cr amnesty scheme, more compensation etc

To me it is new age corruption and politics - in spite of promoting co sharing of services if we give everything free, it will make people lazy and demand everything free. Yes they may vote for you but shelling out dozens of money free is new age corruption, difference being rather than giving from back door you give them same public money from front. 
I read somewhere, teach man how to fish rather than giving him fish. To funds these freebies, I last read petrol/diesel were made expensive in Delhi despite no improvement/commitment in public transportation. 

2. Jobs, economy - I unfortunately did not hear AAP getting more corporates to setup base in Delhi, giving environment to startups, creating specific zones like GIFT, BKC (applied for) to get financial companies in Delhi. A Delhite today go to Bangalore, Mumbai, Pune or Hyderabad for jobs or I see my friends moving to Gurgaon because of corporates being there and they cant handle mess on Delhi roads for 2 hours each way from office daily. Traders are still unhappy in Delhi.

3. Real Issues -

i) Drinkable water - Issue is not that we want free water, we want drinkable water, never heard anything of this sort from AAP in recent times.
ii) Roads - No press statement over solid roads and new roads to improve infrastructure.
iii) Safety - You indeed have talked about it but we never voted you to blame someone else for it, we want you to take action which you can in your capacity. Be innovative about it.
iv) More FDI - You can very well attract lot of FDI in high tech fields and improve Delhi economy.
v) Air - Reports were written about quality of air, I did not see any campaign from govt to make people aware, cutting down diesel vehicles etc etc
vi) Traffic - Innovative solutions like pay for using roads during office hours or improvement through introduction of Tram. 
vii) Mumbai attracted 100 cr from US for road safety, never saw Delhi govt applied for it and getting foreign free help.
viii) DTC - If DTC is loss making, steps can be taken to monetize assets and make world class public transportation. 

4. Corruption

i) I read news that 500 old crores INR was spent on your publicity from people fund, if you are not taking that money through back door and investing in politics. It is real example of new age corruption by diverting money for vote bank which could have been utilized for betterment of society.
ii) My friends told me that few people have been employed under Delhi govt without interview with posh salaries. Promoting our people without merit or atleast proper recruitment channel with mass advertisements is new age corruption.
iii) Pics came on Facebook showing stadium with Arvind Kejriwal name by mass during Independence Day, shouldn't it have been Jai Hind. Again money wasted on self promotion from public funds, this again is real age corruption.
 

5. Politics - AAP has said that they do not wish to indulge in politics. Going to ex-servicemen for OROP is politics and gain publicity only when matter is with central govt.
I saw Facebook of AAP criticizing Central Govt for non Delhi related matters, you do your work why indulge in politics?

You have done good work in raising hopes and I salute you for it. Creating more schools, hospitals is step in positive direction. However, quality of current schools is something that worry me the most. Anyways, it would be useful to have your views on above. I would be happy if I can be of help towards betterment of Delhi along with you. I know you and your team want better Delhi. I have been bit harsh in this letter but want to share my, my friends view through this mechanism.

Regards,
Saumya Aggarwal
AAM Admi

Saturday, August 15, 2015 by Saumya Aggarwal · 5

Saturday, August 8, 2015

World's First Pocket Washing Machine


You use bulky washing machine for laundry which occupies big shape at one corner of your office? No, I am not talking to replace it but a handy tool which can help mop up small stains, and is small enough to carry in any bag.

Machine is just like electric shaver which is good solution to dig out stains of ketchup, food when you are out in office or shopping. It is brought by Haier and it works in less than 2 mins. It operates on batteries and use water with detergent to work the magic quickly.

How much you are willing to pay for this innovation?

 It is reportedly to be available at initial offer of less than 100 SGD in the market, certainly attractive to make it household product. I believe its FBI that works well for this product.


1. Functionality - Useful functionality specially when out of home and need quick fix. Since there is need, this solution rings the right bell.
2. Buyer - Being affordable makes it very attractive buy. We do not always calculate the odds of running embarrassing situations however to have insurance in your pocket does not harm.
3. Innovation - Product is result of modern day innovative and may turn into want for large office goer population.




 

Saturday, August 8, 2015 by Saumya Aggarwal · 1

Whats happening in Indian politics?


Mr. Modi with much cheer became Prime Minister of biggest democracy in the world last year, entire world bowed and Indian economy finally looked to go on upward trajectory. One year after, the road looks bumpy. What has changed or is it nothing has changed, is the new government similar to previous scam hit rule, I have too many questions in my mind. Lot of experts have shared their views, here is what I think in what I call CAT.



CAT - Congress, Attitude, Time.

1. Congress - Main opposition party and previous ruling party in India seem to be blocking every thing and creating demonstrations which make little sense. They were hit by major scams during their rule but not playing constructive opposition does not seem to be doing Indian Economy any good. BJP, now ruling party has majority in Lok Sabha but needs good opposition for better world in Rajya Sabha.

2. Time - It takes time to change things in large economy like India. Previous ruling party Congress tried to bring changes however coalition government was not very successful. They did good work in first UPA tenure but lot of it got lost in second tenure (2009-14) and now with new vision and ease of good doing business, Tourism promotion, Infra push - I believe it will take atleast 2 yrs to run the growth engine at full speed.

3. Attitude - People attitude towards own nation need to change. Be more professional and do, mean more business. Instead of seeking freebies, lets play our role in constructing economy - make it more safe, work hard and do your bit for cleaning India (Swatchh Bharat Initiative).

by Saumya Aggarwal · 0

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

India to Singapore Life Begins | Remitting money from Singapore to India

Well, life begins in Singapore for me. Internal transfer to look into different segment of clients and geography within Bloomberg. Singapore has been on a high start in 2015 and since I have moved I have found ways to work on social issues here which I intend to post subsequently.

Apart from finding houses, one of first thing I had to do was to remit money in India to take care of my last bills there. I checked with few NRIs here and did lot of research online, none could give me better answer than DBS or Indian Bank ICICI. I was about to go for obvious choice of DBS as ICICI has hidden charges in SGD for transfer. However I decided to do last round of check, SGD to INR rate given by many banks were way different, here is my summary.

Axis Bank: 44.9
DBS: 45.33
HDFC: 45.31
ICICI: 45.58
Remit2India: 45.45
SBI SP: 45.37
Yes Bank: 45.17 + 0.50
Kotak: 45.60

Honestly, when I loved above I could not find out why Axis Bank is even competing. DBS does remit the money instantly which is best among all offerings. ICICI on other side has transfer charges which makes it incompetent to other banks. SBI being government bank was out of list as I do not expect good service, then my eyes were caught by new generation Indian banks Kotak and Yes. Kotak upon further research made me feel that rates were different however due to promotion Yes Bank turned out to be best. I immediately filled the service application and understood they use Remit2India/Timesofmoney engine only but somehow give better rates than them. Relationship manager was quick to respond however filling the form was a pain as they did not take Singapore number correctly and IT usability was all of the place of the website. Finally the money got
transferred successfully and I am happy to have used Yes Bank.



Please share your insights on getting best exchange rates for remitting money to India.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015 by Saumya Aggarwal · 0

Sunday, February 1, 2015

India: Private Education miniting enough money to influence media

Decade back, there were not enough private institutions and quality education was forte of government run institutions. Now the scenario is fast changing with tons of big groups entering into private education as billion strong Indian population needs to get "Educated".

This is my first post since shifting to Singapore. Well almost settled here, I feel there is stark difference in education in Singapore and India. I came across an article in Times of India today (website) which boosts of private colleges being hub of industry interaction and placements.
The article seems to be inspired from these so called TOP education institutions making false image in front of vast reader base. Money seems to be pouring into these institutions and they are not shy to influence media with money power.



Article says "Galgotias University was also ranked as the No.1 Private University for Engineering Education in Northern India by the DataQuest Top T-Schools Survey 2014. Galgotias University is also top-ranked among India's top 20 engineering institutions - ahead of several leading NITs."
Though it is great to see new private university making it to top but it certainly raises questions on credibility of these ranking companies. I asked 2 students who are known to good friend of mine and it gave me completely different perspective.
---

Student 1: "I read the article shared by you. It makes me think that if I am among top ranked student in lets say North India and could not crack IITs, will I take admission in Galgotias? Answer is no, no top students want to go to Galgotias."


Me: I was shocked to see his reaction as it is stated to top in North India. I decided to probe further.

Students 1: He said all these rankings are fake. Thapar University is known to be great and pretty old for this reputation, how come Galgotias, which take heavy capitation and actual placement records are nowhere close to advertised one, made it to the top?



Me: Ok, may be this student is biased. Lets head to second one.

Student 2: This article is crap. My girlfriend studies in Amity and her best friend in Galgotias. Both claim to be best and in certain inspired rankings both come number 1. We need to understand why they do it - to take more money from prospective students claiming to be best as they do not make much money through normal meritocratic route. Placements figures are fudged and sometimes companies are paid to come to institutions to pick students. The entire industry is running on IT boom where even sweepers need to be engineers.
---
Article in contention is http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/education/news/How-do-premium-private-universities-achieve-near-complete-placements/articleshow/46039404.cms

Please do not pay heed to such articles and make an informed decision by what I call 2 way approach (CP Approach):

1. C: Current Student: Talk to current students to take complete stock of the institute situation and its practices. It is very easy

2.  P: Past Student: Check out LinkedIn for past students in terms of profile and work organizations. Also check if anyone became a genuine entrepreneur (not joining his dad's company).

Don's get me wrong, I do believe that private education can or rather have made an impact but boastful marketing is not in benefit of society. 
Everyone has seen full pagers ads stating better than IITs, IIMs on consistent basis. I think media should play constructive role in educating masses about quality of education and where to find one. Capitation is one of by product of privatization and state government should take over admission process to ensure quality is accessed on meritocracy and black money is not involved.

Sunday, February 1, 2015 by Saumya Aggarwal · 0

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