Thursday 27 December 2018

Quote of the Week - I

   The breath within my lungs was so exhausted
from climbing, I could not go on; in fact,
as soon as I had reached that stone, I sat.
   "Now you must cast aside your laziness,"
my master said, "for he who rests on down
or under covers cannot come to fame;
   and he who spends his life without renown
leaves such a vestige of himself on earth
as smoke bequeaths to air or foam to water.
   Therefore, get up; defeat your breathlessness
with spirit that can win all battles if
the body's heaviness does not deter it.
   A longer ladder still is to be climbed;
it's not enough to have left them behind;
if you have understood, now profit from it."
   Then I arose and showed myself far better
equipped with breath than I had been before:
"Go on, for I am strong and confident
The Divine Comedy: Inferno by Dante Alighieri (Mandelbaum translation)


Wednesday 21 November 2018

Gordon's Magnum Opus and Lessons for India - I

Good books take time to read. If you're reading a classic work of literature there isn't much sense in trying to "finish" it as soon as possible. You might as well stick to the more pulpy fast paced novels and no one would judge you for it.

The same applies to non-fiction works. Some of my most favorite books in this genre have been written by scientists and mathematicians, and most of them took me years to read. I still reread them albeit (naturally) a bit faster than on the first occasion. There is always so much more that you can absorb.

When I decided to become an economist after years of harmless flirting with the subject on the sidelines, I realized I was missing a firm foundation and, even more importantly, taste in the subject. Just like a good biryani tastes even better the next day after the flavors are absorbed fully (we say, "zayka utar jaana"), no discipline can be truly understood without letting it simmer and then letting the subconscious take in a feel for what you intend to master.

I've been reading many books in this pursuit and maybe I'll come round to discussing all of them in turn. However, I decided to start with Robert Gordon's The Rise and Fall of American Growth because of several reasons:

  1. The Purely Selfish: It's a mammoth book and writing down the lessons I learnt from it help me document, preserve, and more deeply appreciate the many threads in the larger theme of the book.
  2. A Great Story: Like all good works in research, fiction or otherwise, the author tells a fascinating story. And all good stories deserve to be shared.
  3. Potential for Debate: The book is not the final word on the account of growth in the developed world - far from it. There is much to be discussed and questioned and I intend to do that, at least with myself. For that, I need to write all the main points somewhere. Here.
  4. Lessons for India: The growth story of the US is fascinating and belittling. Fascinating because the growth was rapid, world-changing and very cool. Belittling because you instantly recognize India is, in many areas, at the same place as US in 1930; at times even 1870.
So there we have it. This series of blog posts will discuss Gordon's work. I will often skim through deeper points and will not be able to maintain a critical economists' eye at all times - the effort required would be too time consuming. No, this is meant to be a fountain for future inspiration and understanding.

We begin next week though in the meantime you can read a review from 2016 written by recent Nobel laureate William D. Nordhaus. Also, my Goodreads review of the book.




Sunday 2 September 2018

Plan for this Blog

No one really reads a blog unless it gives you tangible rewards. That's not what others think. That's what I believe. I have 37 tabs open on my browser. I have hundreds of Pocketed articles on my mobile phone. And then I vainly write this post hoping someone would read it. They won't. Not unless I do something for them.

That, in essence, was the argument I repeated to myself over the past year. Every time I sat down to share my thoughts I aborted the attempt out of my own sense of insignificance in the larger scheme of things.

Not much has changed except that in the course of two years of Graduate studies, in a subject I barely knew before I spent a year or so crash coursing through it, and in a city that grows more beautiful by the day, I have decided to write for three readers who I know will read what I write.

And so we begin once more. I won't merely restart this blog. I shall write two of them. This one will continue to carry thoughts on current affairs, sports, books and life. The other shall be more technical. I have a lot to share and to eagerly discuss from the world of economics and finance. Two years have ensured I can carry a steady stream of posts that should appeal to at least some readers.

Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story
of that man skilled in all ways of contending,
the wanderer, harried for years on end,
after he plundered the stronghold
on the proud height of Troy.

Middlemarch

A book review written a year after the book was read is not a review per se. I cannot bank on a spontaneous rush of thoughts. I no longer ha...