Govt. is bent upon to waste the age advantage factor, increasing retiring age, whereas all govt. servants must be retired after serving 15 years i.e. getting pension time, new blood must be inducted so that new faces come up. This will reduce corruption, will bring efficiency and justice to youths.
Re: Employment
by arun sharma on Apr 09, 2014 11:34 AM
Remove only corruption from country, it will grow automatically.All retired persons should work through RTI in only engineering departments development activity.A difference will be seen
Re: Employment
by saravana kumar on Apr 09, 2014 11:39 AM
The youth of new generation are already qualified in corrupt activities. The new entrants are selecting the departments on entering the jobs, where they could harvest more! These people are more dangerous than the seniors. The present situation is like this.
Re: Re: Dark red patches
by piri on Apr 08, 2014 09:50 PM
No, little oaf, not half of Kerala as you, in your ignorance, would like to imagine.
There are 18 lakh malayalis working in the persian gulf countries. This constitutes about 5.5 % of the Kerala population. Their dependents constitute another 0.7 % of the Kerala population. So, 6.2 % of malayalis live in the gulf (figures from the ministry of Overseas Indian affairs).
And who has taken the place of most of these malayalis in Kerala (to do manual labour) ?
Why, men and women (chiefly men) from Orissa, Tamil Nadu, AP, Bihar, Jharkhand, M.P, Bengal......yes even Gujarat !
The number of workers in Kerala who have migrated in from these states crossed 25 lakhs in January, 2013 as per the state labour ministry.
So, there you are. Better education and better skills help malayali workers land jobs in the persian gulf that give them attractive savings for a lifetime.
And immensely better minimum wages in Kerala (Rs. 400 to Rs. 600 per day for uskilled labour as against the measly Rs. 80 to Rs. 120 per day they get in their boondock home states) make the men from Orissa and other north Indian states stream in ever increasing numbers to Kerala to take the place of the malayalis who have left for the gulf!
This situation is indeed ironic, but not for the reason you like to imagine. It is ironic because the state with supposedly no industries now has immigrant workers from TN, AP and many north Indian states whose number now make up around 7 % of the Kerala populati
Re: Re: Re: Dark red patches
by piri on Apr 08, 2014 09:58 PM
and who would rather die than go back to their home states to work and earn a living!
While the Persian gulf has long been the El Dorado for the Kerala working class, Kerala itself is the El Dorado for the working classes of north India !
The difference between malayali workers and workers from most other states in terms of living standards and aspirations is well and truly ironic!
Despite alleged lack of industries (this is another fondly cherished canard by the middle classes from other states - Kerala ranked 9th among all Indian states in terms of per capita industrial output), Kerala has wages 4 to 5 times as high as those in the supposedly industrially advanced states!
Re: Re: Re: Re: Dark red patches
by Against Pseudos on Apr 08, 2014 11:21 PM
Piri: According to you whole of India is a developed nation. Millions of NRIs in US. Millions if Biharis employed in Mumbai. Ergo there is no poverty in India.
Re: Re: Dark red patches
by AKSHAY JAIN on Apr 09, 2014 10:32 AM
In gulf they do not work rather do slavery. They have spoilt whole labour market and badly defamed image of country.
Re: Re: Re: Dark red patches
by Ramesh Vishwakarma on Apr 09, 2014 11:01 AM
I agree with Akshay Jain, that they have spoiled the name of India... that's why most of Philippino's are being hired to Gulf. Sooner, malyalis will be stopping slavery, it will be better... No body hires Indian for senior positions as they have seen in the past that malyalis are playing more corrupt practices as compared to other nationalities..