Monday 18 June 2018

The tiny ad that will stop IAS officers from believing they are superior human beings

The tiny ad that will stop IAS officers from believing they are superior human beings
MIHIR SHARMA 15 June, 2018
MIHIR SHARMA 15 June, 2018
Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an informal interaction with bureaucrats | narendramodi.in
The opening up of the civil service to qualified outsiders has brought down one of India's stoutest walls.
It was the most carefully examined little square of newsprint in recent Indian history. Last week, a small job ad appeared on the inside pages of some newspapers looking for candidates for the post of "joint secretary" in the Indian government. Within a few hours, the ad had gone viral: Opposition politicians had weighed in, Twitter was agog and hundreds of thousands of 40ish Indians wondered if they had one last, unexpected opportunity to make their parents proud.
Anyone unfamiliar with the Indian state would have been mystified by the uproar. After all, just 10 positions were being advertised, and successful applicants would get a three-year contract — at government salaries. What was the big deal?
Quick-take India's Aspirations
Indians, on the other hand, immediately recognized that in opening up the ranks of the civil service to qualified outsiders, one of their country's stoutest walls had been breached. India has the most closed and hierarchical government of any major democracy. In fact, India's bureaucracy is more removed from its people than those in many authoritarian countries. Our politicians may get all the attention, but everyone knows that mid-level bureaucrats such as joint secretaries — there are about 350 of them in all — are India's real policy-makers.
A tiny cadre of generalists, known as the Indian Administrative Service, currently monopolizes these posts. Members of the IAS are selected in their 20s, after a fiendishly difficult entrance examination. In 2016, 1.1 million people sat for the first stage of the selection process; all knew that only 180 of them would make it into the service. Success is about as likely as a tossed nickel landing on its edge. You have better odds of becoming an astronaut if you apply to NASA. Ten times better, in fact.
But, if you make it through the exam, you are guaranteed to be one of India's rulers for life. Constitutionally, you can't be fired without a time-consuming and troublesome legal process. At most, elected politicians can transfer you from one post to another.
Before your 30th birthday, you'll be given an Indian district to run, answerable to no local politician or council, and with near-absolute power over millions of people. You'll collect their taxes, sit in judgment over their land disputes, control the local police and disburse pensions and scholarships and welfare. You'll travel everywhere with a retinue of junior officials and favor-seekers, live in the nicest house in the district and be the guest of honor at every social function. Unsurprisingly, after awhile it can become quite hard to remember that you are, after all, just another public servant. In fact, you might begin to suspect you are a superior breed of human.
Thus, when you're called to New Delhi and made a joint secretary in, say, the shipping ministry, you're confident that you will be able to devise complex new rules for berthing super-tankers in Indian ports on your second day at work. Of course, given that transfers and postings are almost random, next year you might be deciding on a trade agreement in the Ministry of Commerce. Or perhaps predicting the course of the monsoon at the Ministry of Earth Sciences. Naturally, you know you will do so correctly. Your degree might have been in 13th-century poetry or something, but training and expertise are for lesser mortals. You passed a very difficult examination 30 years ago and are thus fully qualified to rule one-fifth of humanity.
This unaccountable, walled-off governance structure helps answer a question that outsiders often ask: If India's state is served by such intelligent and confident officers, why is it so lazy, incompetent and backward-looking? Policy is ill-conceived, rules are detached from economic reality, laws are poorly drafted and regulations gush forth from government offices to drown India's billion-plus citizens in paperwork.
And this is why many of us see that little newspaper advertisement as not just another job posting, but the first draft of a declaration of independence. We can begin to believe that, one day, positions in New Delhi's corridors of power — positions with real responsibility — will be given to people with demonstrated ability in the fields they are supposed to supervise.
I'm not declaring independence just yet. There are many reasons to be wary. The opposition is justly suspicious that the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to stock the bureaucracy with individuals sympathetic to his party's Hindu nationalist ideology. Others worry that a revolving door between government and the private sector is being installed, which will lead to greater corporate power over the state. Marginalized groups wonder if India's affirmative-action policies are going to be ignored.
I myself worry that many of these positions will not be filled by world-class experts but by, for example, officers from India's inefficient public sector. Even so, those of us who have long despaired of India reforming its byzantine administration can perhaps be permitted a smidgen of hope. -Bloomberg

Sunday 17 June 2018

FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker

Hello!
I am attaching a different tracker here, which you may find interesting and easy to use.
You can change settings on the 'Settings' tab.

Best wishes.

Regards, Manohar
 


On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 at 19:32, Manohar Ramtri <ramtri@gmail.com> wrote:


----- Forwarded Message -----


If forwarding further, please delete my id, and use the BCC field for addressees, to reduce spam, viruses and identity theft. Thanks!



Sent: Thursday, June 7, 2018 23:14
To: ...
Subject: FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download (chandoo.org)

FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download (chandoo.org)

Link to Chandoo.org – Learn Excel, Power BI & Charting Online

Posted: 07 Jun 2018 03:35 AM PDT
FIFA world cup 2018 is around the corner. I love soccer, I love Excel, Let's marry them. Here is an awesome, free FIFA world cup Excel Tracker to help you follow this year's games in Russia.
Click here to download the FIFA world cup 2018 tracker.

What you can do with this FIFA world cup Tracker Excel?

You can use this tracker to,
  • View schedules in your local time for group and knockout stages
  • View summary and detailed points table
  • Refresh live points table. When you refresh, the tracker show updated points based on latest results (You need Excel 2016, Office 365 or older versions of Excel with Power Query)
  • View knockout stage matches as a bracket
  • See timeline of the matches

How to use the world cup 2018 tracker?

Start page – set up the tracker

When you open the workbook, use "Home" page to set up your local timezone and favorite teams.
FIFA 2018 world cup tracker - home page

Group Stage – Schedule & summary points table

The group stage view shows all teams. It highlights your team(s) in different color to see when their games will be on.
2018 soccer world cup Excel - group schedule
On this page, you can also see group-wise points table. This is a live table. So as the matches happen, just press CTRL+ALT+F5 to update this table. The data comes from Wikipedia FIFA 2018 page thru Power Query. So you need Excel 2016 / Excel 365  or an older version of Excel with Power Query to get the refresh work.
group level points table - football world cup 2018

Bracket View – Knockout Schedule

The knockout stage shows last 16, quarter-final, semi final and final matches in bracket view. This page is not dynamic. So as group stage finishes, go ahead and list the team names in the gray cells. 
bracket view - knockout stage - Russia world cup 2018

Timeline View

This shows all matches in a Gantt chart like view. From this you can track all your favorite team matches. It will also highlight current date so you know which matches are coming up next.
soccer world cup 2018 Russia - timeline of the matches

Download FREE FIFA world cup tracker

Click here to download the FIFA world cup 2018 tracker.

Which teams are you rooting for?

As usual, I am cheering for Germany and Brazil. I will also watch out how Denmark & Sweden (my former homes) are going to play.
What about you?
The post FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download appeared first on Chandoo.org - Learn Excel, Power BI & Charting Online.
You are subscribed to email updates from Chandoo.org – Learn Excel, Power BI & Charting Online.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States

Monday 11 June 2018

Fw: FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download (chandoo.org)

----- Forwarded Message -----


If forwarding further, please delete my id, and use the BCC field for addressees, to reduce spam, viruses and identity theft. Thanks!



Sent: Thursday, June 7, 2018 23:14
To: ...
Subject: FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download (chandoo.org)

FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download (chandoo.org)

Link to Chandoo.org – Learn Excel, Power BI & Charting Online

FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download

Posted: 07 Jun 2018 03:35 AM PDT

FIFA world cup 2018 is around the corner. I love soccer, I love Excel, Let's marry them. Here is an awesome, free FIFA world cup Excel Tracker to help you follow this year's games in Russia.

Click here to download the FIFA world cup 2018 tracker.

What you can do with this FIFA world cup Tracker Excel?

You can use this tracker to,

  • View schedules in your local time for group and knockout stages
  • View summary and detailed points table
  • Refresh live points table. When you refresh, the tracker show updated points based on latest results (You need Excel 2016, Office 365 or older versions of Excel with Power Query)
  • View knockout stage matches as a bracket
  • See timeline of the matches

How to use the world cup 2018 tracker?

Start page – set up the tracker

When you open the workbook, use "Home" page to set up your local timezone and favorite teams.

FIFA 2018 world cup tracker - home page

Group Stage – Schedule & summary points table

The group stage view shows all teams. It highlights your team(s) in different color to see when their games will be on.

2018 soccer world cup Excel - group schedule

On this page, you can also see group-wise points table. This is a live table. So as the matches happen, just press CTRL+ALT+F5 to update this table. The data comes from Wikipedia FIFA 2018 page thru Power Query. So you need Excel 2016 / Excel 365  or an older version of Excel with Power Query to get the refresh work.

group level points table - football world cup 2018

Bracket View – Knockout Schedule

The knockout stage shows last 16, quarter-final, semi final and final matches in bracket view. This page is not dynamic. So as group stage finishes, go ahead and list the team names in the gray cells. 

bracket view - knockout stage - Russia world cup 2018

Timeline View

This shows all matches in a Gantt chart like view. From this you can track all your favorite team matches. It will also highlight current date so you know which matches are coming up next.

soccer world cup 2018 Russia - timeline of the matches

Download FREE FIFA world cup tracker

Click here to download the FIFA world cup 2018 tracker.

Which teams are you rooting for?

As usual, I am cheering for Germany and Brazil. I will also watch out how Denmark & Sweden (my former homes) are going to play.

What about you?

The post FIFA Worldcup 2018 Excel Tracker – FREE Download appeared first on Chandoo.org - Learn Excel, Power BI & Charting Online.

Thursday 7 June 2018

No Vijay Yatras against Army: Politicising cantonment roads hurts the army, harms the nation and jeopardises security

 

No Vijay Yatras against Army: Politicising cantonment roads hurts the army, harms the nation and jeopardises security

June 6, 2018, 2:00 AM IST Nalin Mehta in Academic Interest | Edit PageIndia | TOI

Anyone who has ever felt anything for the Indian army cannot help but be taken aback by the spectacle of political vijay yatras that were seen in the last few days on some of our army cantonment roads. Cantonments are the bedrock of the Indian army. Even if you think that some cantonment roads needed to be opened up in wider public interest, televised images of lower-level BJP workers celebrating a 'vijay yatra' in Pune cantonment – swarming around on bikes and SUVs draped with party flags, distributing sweets and posing for self-congratulatory sound bites outside military gates – made for terrible optics.

At a time when army wives, families and veterans around the country were mobilising daily on social media against the original ministry of defence (MoD) statement on May 20, which ordered "all closed roads in the Cantonments to be reopened up immediately", such political chest-thumping by karyakartas celebrating their little, local triumphs in the innermost bastions of the defence community sent out misleading signals. For a party that has built its political messaging on a muscular no-nonsense nationalism and the cult of the brave soldier, the contrast between the articulate, pleading army wives who have been leading the agitation against the reopening of cantonment roads versus the local vested interests who took to the cameras to celebrate what they saw as a victory against their own army was too sharp to be missed.

Defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman rightly responded to the counter-pressure from within the defence community by meeting an army wives' delegation with "an open mind" on May 31. The army has also clarified that the original decision to reopen closed roads in military areas was for "one month", that it would thereafter "review the nature of traffic passing through these areas" and that a final decision will be taken after "feedback from Local Military Authorities (LMA)". Whatever the final decision on the matter, it has once again refocussed attention on the growing tensions in the underlying social compact that has always underpinned the military-civilian relationship in the world's largest democracy.

It is important to remember that arterial roads in many cantonments like say Delhi, along with its adjoining Gopinath Bazar, have always been open to the wider public. Most of India's 62 cantonments have always had large numbers of civilians (either from adjunct government departments or those providing services) residing within their geographic limits.

Yes, there have often been long-standing tussles over specific areas, but these have always been resolved at local levels. For example, in Secunderabad cantonment, the government decided to close Gough Road to civilian traffic in December 2015. This followed an order by the Telangana and Andhra Pradesh high court on September 26, 2014. However, a specific request by the chief minister of Telangana meant that the decision was first deferred by six months and then a further four times till March 31, 2018, as MoS for defence Subhash Bhamre recently informed Parliament.

Issues like this meant that as far back as January 7, 2015, MoD issued instructions that "no public road, outside unit lines, in a Cantonment shall be closed by any authority other than a Cantonment Board, for any reasons other than security and without following the procedure laid down under Section 258 of the Cantonments Act, 2006." As many as 24 roads nationally were opened up at the time. No one can reasonably argue with a structured case-by-case process of resolving legitimate disputes.

However, the reason this controversy blew up was because of the blanket directive on May 20, for "all closed roads" to be "reopened immediately". From the attack on Kaluchak in 2002 to the Sunjuwan military base in early 2018, military families and installations have been repeatedly targeted in terror attacks as part of a deliberate strategy. There is also the issue of security for separated families, many of whom live in cantonment areas while soldiers serve in border areas. The blanket order (though certain stations were operationally exempt from it) raised several security concerns, as several veterans have pointed out. All militaries, including in the US, UK and Australia, control access to their military garrison areas for security reasons.

At a deeper level, our cantonments were largely created by the British who deliberately kept army garrisons outside cities. The military was designed to be outside of society, precisely to keep it at arms length from the many problems of society. As our cities have grown, most of these cantonments find themselves engulfed by them, leading to civil-military problems that the roads access issue signifies.

Either, we create new military areas or we as citizens agree to put up with reasonable security measures. For example, Delhi Metro has ensured that only those with proper ID needed to enter a cantonment area are authorised to get off at the Shankar Vihar station on its new Magenta line, as it falls inside a secure location.

Finally, cantonment boards are currently led by serving army officers and comprise civilian bureaucrats as well as elected officials. Defence lands are a prize commodity. MoD data show that as much as 9,980 acres of its lands nationwide have been encroached so far. With colonies coming up along defence lands, local landed interests and elected representatives on boards drove some of the pressure for opening up defence roads.

Even as the public respect for soldiers has increased in recent decades, many in the defence forces have begun to feel a growing lack of understanding of their concerns within the bureaucracy. They see the current controversy as reflecting that larger malaise. This is why it is important to move cautiously on this matter and address it holistically.

 

DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.