Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Monday, August 29, 2016
Responsible tourism
When you travel, you have an opportunity to use your money in a way that supports the local people in their livelihoods. There are two theoretical concepts in this connection:
1)leakage: this is related to how much tourism money stays in the local economy and how much goes out. If the money goes to local people and they in turn use that to pay other local people, the money benefits the local economy more and more. This is good.
2.) who benefits locally. Ideally it would be nice if our money could support those lower on the economic ladder as much as possible
As an example, I noticed that the comparatively small town of Aurangabad has some pretty fancy hotels. Of course this is because its the nearest base for the Ajantha and Ellora caves. So I can visualise that rich tourists would fly into Aurangabad, go to a fancy hotel, then take a rental car, go to Ajantha and Ellora and then back to the hotel and then back to the airport and out. If you analyse the money they spend, you can see that most of it leaks or doesn't stay in the local economy:
- flight : money mostly goes to aviation fuel, trained airline and airport personnel
- vehicle : mostly towards fuel (a good that comes from outside) and the driver (money stays locally hopefully)
- hotel : high-end hotels usually use a lot of men and material from outside the local area, both in their construction and running.
When you think about it, responsible tourism is pretty hard to do in India. We would like to stay in reasonably decent places, which are clean, hygienic and pleasant. Unfortunately, this isn't part of the culture in India generally it seems (see : http://despoki.blogspot.in/2016/08/a-new-kind-of-hotel.html ) . In our food too, given low food hygiene standards in India , we obviously would tend to try to go to as upscale a place as possible to be safe, and give the local mom-and-pop shops a miss.
So it can be a challenge. But I think with a little thought and with crowdsourcing of ideas, we could come up with quite a lot of good ways to support the local economy as much as we can when travelling. Here's some to start with:
1.) Homestay and hostels: These are quite interesting staying options until my "new kind of hotel" becomes a reality. The negatives of bad hotels don't seem to apply to a large extent to households in India. So the idea of homestays ( where you stay at someone's home, not a hotel) might work out quite well, though its still in its infancy now. Youth hostels tend to be decently maintained and run and are another option. So are hotels run by the tourism department, though the quality of these varies widely in practice.
2.) Buying the local traditional arts and crafts: This is a no-brainer and something most of us love to do anyway. The more research we do before going on a trip, the better in this regard. For example, to find producers who give their workers a decent wage and to find genuine products rather than cheap ripoffs.
3.) Hire a good tour guide please, when you go to a historical monument or area. This is an excellent way to contribute, while enhancing your own experience of the area
3.) Another idea, not for the faint-hearted, would be to give a fraction of the money you spend on your trip to an NGO or other deserving cause in the local area. 10% would be a nice starting point, and 50% would be pretty cool :-)
In general, the longer you stay in the area and more you get to understand and appreciate the local people and culture, the better, it seems to me. Hurried in-and-out and weekend trips don't serve anyone very well, it seems to me
Notes, References:
1. If you're going to Wayanad, staying at the Wayanad County resort directly contribute to the well-being of tribal workers at the associated plantation. Read the happy story:
http://www.thebetterindia.com/66124/ias-officer-prasanth-nair-priyadarshini-tea-estate-tourism-hunger-malnutrition-tribal-people-wayanad/
1. If you're going to Wayanad, staying at the Wayanad County resort directly contribute to the well-being of tribal workers at the associated plantation. Read the happy story:
http://www.thebetterindia.com/66124/ias-officer-prasanth-nair-priyadarshini-tea-estate-tourism-hunger-malnutrition-tribal-people-wayanad/
Sunday, August 28, 2016
Public art
While the classical vs. modern debate rages on, public art is one of the sites where it plays out in practice. Public art can be quite difficult to do well - you want to appeal to as wide a constituency of people, but serious art is often specialised and becomes inaccessible.
Singapore seems to do quite well in doing good public art. Changi Airport always has something interesting going on. Below are three other pieces that I really liked:
This brilliant piece recently installed at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. It uses just layers of wire mesh to create a likeness of the man. The artist must have taken years to build up his competence in doing this
This clever installation at Gardens by the Bay gives the impression of figures that are hanging in the air
This quirky piece at a mall was done as part of some robotics demonstration. Screams 'Japanese aesthetic' to me
See http://despoki.blogspot.in/2016/01/many-thoughts-about-art-triggered-by.html for the previous post in the 'art' thread
A new kind of hotel - II
Just as I was posting http://despoki.blogspot.in/2016/08/a-new-kind-of-hotel.html , I ran into two nice illustrative examples.
I stayed at the MSTDC resort/hotel outside the Ajanta caves, at a small town called Faradpur. The hotel almost perfectly captured what I was saying:
1.) Very clean
2.) Local flavour - the room decoration was excellent photos of Maharashtra tourist destinations. So nice decoration while also advertising their stuff
3.) Beautiful high ceilings
4.) Pretty decent furniture , mostly wood
5.) Large clean bathroom, not fancy
I really enjoyed staying at this place and paid about 1200/- (off peak, without bargaining).

I also stayed at a very nice modern hotel in Sholapur in Maharashtra. It was very new and everything looked fine, but my theory is that it will stop looking quite so fine very quickly. For example they had this nice luxurious bedspread
but it already had got stained with oil
So now they are stuck with an expensive asset that can't be repaired easily and that they are going to be loath to throw aways, so that is going to piss off every customer who stays in the room in perpetuity.
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Fundamentals of healthcare policy
Basically copied from Prof. M. Ramesh's excellent slides on the topic :
Health Care is a “private” good which markets can provide efficiently in a technical sense. Free competition among providers and insurers would ensure that prices are as low and quality as high as possible. Households would get the services they want and can afford and society would benefit from highest quality and lowest prices
Yet there are many features that make health care an atypical private good :
Many public goods features
Information Asymmetries
make estimation of quality, costs and benefits difficult
allow opportunity for supplier-induced demand
Moral hazard
Adverse selection by consumers, users and providers
Those least able to afford health care have the largest demand for it.
Possibility of “catastrophic” health care expenses
Nearly impossible to save for all health care contingencies
As a result, market allocation of health care would lead to
Higher costs and prices
Poorer quality (except for the frills that consumers can see)
Inequity (because access related to income)
Technically, government can address the above failings :
Directly provide health care with public goods features
Pay for or provide the necessary health care to those who cannot afford it
Adopt measures to limit the market participants’ ability to exploit information advantage
Eg. Require transparency in pricing and outcomes
Regulate adverse selection
Adjust provider payment and financing mechanisms to reduce moral hazard
However, there are practical limitations to govt intervention:
Limited financial resources
Incomplete information on consumer and producer behaviour and the different medical options
Lack of analytical capacity to understand needs of the sector
Lack of administrative capacity to implement policy
Lack of political capacity to deal with conflicting demands of various stake-holders (Consumers, physicians, managers, insurers, healthy, etc )
Considering the potential and limitations of both markets and governments, an effective health care system requires health policy that employs extensive role for both to offset each others disadvantages
An optimal health care market is characterized by:
Competition among providers to attract. But competition over value rather than frills.
Limitations on providers freedom to prescribe and charge, so that they do not take advantage of patients’ ignorance
Limitations on insurers’ freedom to select risk or set premium, so as to prevent cream skimming or passing on of costs to consumers or government
Limitations on consumers, so as to minimize moral hazard
Establish risk pooling to ensure redistribution of resources from more healthy and wealthy to less healthy and wealthy.
Reduce out of pocket health expenditure
Costs affordable to the society as a whole, rather than the govt. Considers TOTAL (and not public) health expenditures
A good health policy is one that sets out appropriate incentives :
Incentivize providers to improve quality while containing cost
Incentivize users to moderate consumption
Co-insurance or deductible (subject to a stop-loss)
Encourage users to use primary care facilities
Incentivize insurers to get better deal from providers on behalf of their members
Instead of passing on costs to users or the government
Such an optimal health policy requires a strong governance structure characterized by
firm government stewardship
Functioning markets, where possible
Friday, August 12, 2016
A new kind of hotel
From travels in small town India I have had enough experience of hotels in the Rs 2000/- and below range. With a few exceptions the experience has been uniformly uninspiring.
Things that make the travel experience less than fun include:
- the hotels are grimy and dirty
- rooms have cheap plastic furniture that ages very fast and looks shabby
- cobwebs
- walls always have stains, discolourations or yikes, cracks
- power cuts
- kitschy out-of-place decor if at all. A hotel I went to recently had a life-sized wooden sculpture of the famous Marilyn Monroe image.
- yucky toilets - of course the thing that most spoils a hotel experience. Smelly, leaky taps, non-functional plumbing,
- highly dubious bed linen and blankets
- Restaurants if-present , have the deadening standard pan-india menu , you find in countless hotels countrywide. I call it the ‘panneer butter masala’ menu
There is a deep and pervasive lack of interest in maintenance (and it runs much deeper in India than just hotels). I wonder why this is. Is it so expensive to keep a room clean and have everything work the way it should be ?
The other ‘design pattern’ is the choice of building and furnishing material that ages rapidly or starts looking bad quickly and easily. Flooring material, Nilkamal chairs, wall paint
I therefore propose a new kind of hotel. The design philosophy is:
austere, spartan, impeccable, fanatic about cleanliness, local culture and aesthetics
Have less stuff or less facilities, but keep whatever you have looking good and maintain it
Have a breakthrough in bathroom quality.
Figure out how to keep the walls clean - maybe use whitewash which is cheaper and repaint more frequently
Start working with a whole new set of materials that do the job without degrading in appearance and quality rapidly over time
Figure out a new menu tapping into local expertise and local traditions
I read the logic of Tata’s Ginger chain of hotels somewhere and they seem to be on these lines. And pilgrim spots like Tirumala tend to work on these lines of austere and functional. We can build on these and other experiences
Saturday, August 06, 2016
My report on GST (Goods and Services Tax)
As the nation celebrates the passage of the constitution amendment bill on GST in the Rajya Sabha, let me mention the report I did on GST as part of LKY coursework.
One point that is worth making in the current congratulatory mood is that there is still a long road ahead for operationalisation of the GST, multiple bill passings at Union and State level and IT infrastructure to put in place.
Link to my report: https://www.dropbox.com/s/pdiqpfihfptm6db/GSTAssignment.pdf?dl=0
Friday, August 05, 2016
On traffic
It has been good coming back to India after a year's gap and looking at the same everyday things with fresh eyes. In particular, this time around, I am looking at things from the point of view of finding something for myself to do.
Today's observation in this regard: I dived into peak hour Bangalore traffic (Cowtown and Indirangar). Looking at the traffic policeman : who could possibly be motivated to do this job well? You see hordes of people in their swanky A/C cars honking impatiently and you are there in terrible working conditions all day and supposed to make their lives better. Is it surprising that they do a lot of extortion ? Actually, it should be the other way around. We should be liberally tipping them whenever we get a chance, passing by. That would motivate them to stick around at their jobs and do as good a job as they could. This idea could be thought through and pursued more seriously. It is a kind of reverse bribery, but it seems appropriate for India. Its a way of distributing private sector wealth a little more equitably, resulting in better services, without compromising on ethics
Wednesday, August 03, 2016
Bangkok musings
I like Bangkok (like millions of other tourists). I like it not because of its tourist attractions, I like its feel. I would like to live in Bangkok.The numbers and geography tell you that its a huge city, but it has a human scale and a middle-class feel. Weighed down by its infrastructure problems, it has a melancholy. It feels like an Indian city, but better-off: a cleaner, better-fed and sexier India.
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Streetside shop |
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Giant candles in shop |
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Street at night |
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One of the many temples - seen from the river cruise |
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The Rama-Something Bridge, seen from the river cruise |
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The Graceful Spires of Wat Pho |
Tuesday, July 05, 2016
My travel guide to Angkor
The key to visiting Angkor is to not try to do too much. As one guide book put it, the ‘second string’ temples here would be star attractions at any other location. But the mind gets fatigued with too much visiting. So the best thing really is to just go to a few places and spend time at them and soak in the atmosphere. And don’t try to do too much on any one day. My schedule actually worked out very well - reached on day 1 afternoon, early enough for a quick trip to one of the temples ; went to 2 locations on day 2, one in the morning and one in the afternoon, and visit Siem Reap in the evening ; revisit Angkor Wat on day 3 morning and flight out in the afternoon.
From the guidebooks, I picked Angkor Wat, Bayon at Angkor Thom and Ta Prohm and those were the temples I went to. On the way from Angkor Thom to Ta Prohm, I passed Ta Ko another splendid structure and stopped there for a bit. I think Angkor Wat and Ta Prohm are must sees, you could pick the others to see based on reading about them and your personal interests since there is enough unique attractiveness to most of the temples.
A second visit to the place you most like is a good idea - it deepens the experience and there is almost certainly something you missed the first time round.
Since the temples tend to be large and have several kinds of things to look at, a detailed guidebook is a good thing to have It anchors you so that you are not wandering a bit aimlessly and you also can have an idea of what’s there to look out for. I bought one of these guidebooks so you could try getting it from me. A human guide is also a good option, the official guys there seemed pretty good.
The transportation arrangements to the temple from Siem Reap are not the best. I couldn’t figure out a better way so just hired tuktuks via the hotel which waited for me at the temples, which seemed inefficient. And worse, on one of the days, one the way back mixed up my tuktuk drivers and took the wrong driver and wasted some money. Its not just me being me :-) , the guidebooks also warn about confusion with tuktuks. The tuktuks also like to stick to two standard routes (Grand circuit, Little circuit) and you have to talk to them to get them to understand that you want to do your own thing.
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