Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Brainstorming Works Best When You're In a Bad Mood

We all like to think we're most creative when we're happy, but research suggests otherwise. Instead, we're likely at our best when we're angry or a little upset. So the next time you need to do some brainstorming, you may want to try it when you're in a bad mood instead of waiting for the sun to come out.
Over at 99U, David Burkus points to a 2012 study published in the Academy of Management Journal that indicated that participants who were asked to keep a diary of their emotions for a week reported that their most productive days started with negative emotions and ended with positive ones. Essentially, even without knowing it in some cases, they channeled their negativity into their work, with great results.
But how do you apply the idea to your own life? He explains:
One possible explanation is focus. Past research suggests that negative emotions help narrow our focus to specific tasks or projects and even persist longer on those projects, especially when it comes to getting rejected. Perhaps the initial negative emotions were actually helping the professionals keep their mind focused on their work longer, digging deeper into the problems they might be facing and generating better solutions.
To test this idea, the same researchers asked a different group of participants to try their hand at a brainstorming task-listing as many ideas as possible. Before brainstorming, however, the participants were randomly assigned to write a biographical essay recounting either a positive or negative event in their life. Just like the creative professionals in the first task, the participants who reflected on a negative event performed better, listing more ideas that were also more varied and original. Even though their essay writing had no relationship to the brainstorming task, the negative emotions they experienced put them in a better mood to focus on the problem and think up solutions.
While we don't suggest you try to whip yourself up into an irrational rage before heading into a project meeting or sitting down to do some development work, the implications are pretty clear. When you're in a bad mood or having a tough time at work, that may be the best opportunity for you to channel that energy into something that's been bugging you for a long time, or to take a step back from the humdrum and do some brainstorming. You may discover that when you're feeling the crappiest is the best time to make real headway.
Use Your Anger to Smash Creative Blocks 

India plans oil import from Iran to cut import bill, CAD

The oil ministry has worked out a plan to save $22 billion in the oil import bill from Iran thus helping reduce the current account deficit (CAD), petroleum minister M Veerappa Moily has said. 

"Oil (imports) is one of the components responsible for CAD. The prime minister has told us to save $25 billion in the import bill. As of today, we have pieced together a plan to save $22 billion in import bill," Moily said. 

He said the savings would be around one percent of the GDP. 

Moily was talking to reporters Tuesday at an event to present a cheque for Rs.5 lakh to the widow of Arjuna awardee sportsman late Makhan Singh. 

Senior oil ministry sources told IANS that the plan includes renewing imports from sanctions-hit Iran, which India pays in rupees thereby saving foreign exchange and reducing the CAD. 

Officials calculate that importing, for instance, 10 million tonnes oil from Iran means saving $10 billion in foreign exchange outgo. During the last fiscal, India imported 13.1 million tonnes of oil from Iran, down from 18.11 million tonnes of 2011-12. 

After not buying any oil from Iran in first four months of the current fiscal, imports were resumed this month with state-run Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals getting the first tanker-load. 

In view of the current volatility of the rupee against the dollar, India is discussing with Iraq the possibility of trade in local currencies, which would help insulate India's oil imports from Iraq also.

India's first defence satellite all set for launch

India's maritime security will get a fresh impetus as the stage is now set for the launch of an exclusive home-built satellite for the Navy by European space consortium Arianespace from Kourou spaceport in French Guiana on Friday. 

GSAT-7 is India's first dedicated spacecraft for defence applications. 

"It has frequency bands that will help marine communications", an official of Bangalore-headquartered Indian Space Research Organisation, which built the satellite.

"It has coverage over India landmass as well as surrounding seas. It's important from security and surveillance points of view", the official said on condition of anonymity. 

A senior space scientist in the know said: "So far, Navy had limitation from line of sight and ionospheric effects etc. It was thought essential to have an integrated platform for their exclusive use. Earlier, satellite communication in ships was through Inmarsat (a major provider of global mobile satellite communications services). Now, India will have its own set up" 

ISRO shies away from calling it an exclusive satellite for the Navy on record, but privately admits exactly that. 

The Rs 185 crore state-of-the-art satellite carries payloads operating in UHF, S, C and Ku bands. 

GSAT-7 has a lift-off mass of 2625 kg and is based on ISRO's 2500 kg satellite bus with some new technological elements, including the antennae. Its solar arrays generate 2900 W of electrical power. 

A108 Ampere-Hour Lithium-Ion battery enables the satellite to function during the eclipse period. The propulsion subsystem has a 440 Newton Liquid Apogee Motor (LAM) and thrusters. 

GSAT-7 is scheduled to be launched into a Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO) by Ariane-5 VA 215 during the 50-minute launch window starting from 2 am on Friday. 

The launch cost for ISRO is around Rs 470 crore, including insurance. ISRO can't launch heavy satellites like GSAT-7 as its home-grown GSLV rocket, with indigenous cryogenic stage, is still at works and needs two successful flights before it's declared operational.

Rupee closes in on 69 vs dollar, its biggest day fall in 18 years

The rupee slumped to a record low near 69 to the dollar on Wednesday on growing worries that foreign investors will continue to sell out of a country facing stiff economic challenges and volatile global markets. 

The pummelling in markets sent the rupee reeling 3.7 per cent to an all-time low of 68.85 with the unit closing just a touch off that, at 68.80/81 per dollar, its biggest single-day fall since October 1995. 

It closed on Tuesday at 66.24/25. In absolute terms too, the 256-basis-point fall in the rupee was the biggest ever. 

An assault on the psychologically key 70 level now appears imminent, as intervention from the central bank seen mid-morning only gave the rupee a brief respite. 

In the stock market, state-run Life Insurance Corp, which was spotted buying shares, allowed the domestic benchmark index to erase steep early losses and end the day stronger. 

"If steps are not taken to implement the reforms necessary to tackle the structural issues, the government will be left with the so-called '3D options': debt default, devaluation, deflation," said Angelo Corbetta, head of Asia equity for Pioneer Investments in London. 

"In India, devaluation is happening now and deflation could be about to start. The good news is that the debt default is highly unlikely." 

Foreign investors have sold almost $1 billion of Indian shares in the eight sessions through Tuesday — a worrisome prospect given stocks had been India's one sturdy source of capital inflows in the first half of 2013. 

If more foreign investors throw in the towel, traders fear it will put the country in a vicious cycle in which the hit to confidence in turn slams shares and the currency even harder. 

Policymakers have consistently struggled to come up with steps that can convince markets they can stabilise the rupee and attract funds into the country despite extraordinary measures last month by the central bank to drain liquidity and action to curb gold imports and cut India's huge oil import bill. 

Rising oil prices, Fed fears amplify pressure 

India badly needs foreign capital as it struggles with a record high current account deficit, growing fiscal pressures and an economy growing at the slowest in a decade. 

The failure to address India's economic challenges is becoming an increasing source of tension at a time when fears of a possible US-led military strike against Syria are knocking down Asian markets, with the prospect that the Federal Reserve will soon end its prolonged period of cheap money further raising concerns. 

At the same time, rising domestic bond yields threaten to raise borrowing costs across the already slowing economy, while global prices of oil and gold — the country's two biggest imports — have surged this week. 

"The end game for the current decline would be the day the rupee stops falling, alongside government measures like a substantial diesel price hike," said Samir Arora, a fund manager at Helios Capital in Singapore. 

BNP Paribas on Wednesday slashed its economic growth forecast for India for the fiscal year to March 2014 to 3.7 per cent from its previous 5.2 per cent — the weakest growth since 1991-92 when India buckled under a balance of payments crisis that required a loan from the International Monetary Fund. 

"India's parliament remains toxically dysfunctional with little, if any, business conducted," BNP said. 

"And, with next year's general election looming ever nearer, the government's willingness to instigate a politically unpopular fiscal tightening is close to nil." 

India is due to post April-June gross domestic product data on Friday, with analysts estimating the economy grew at an annual rate of 4.7 per cent, roughly in line with the previous quarter. It will also post July federal fiscal deficit figures. 

Lacking confidence 

The rupee has plunged more than 20 per cent this year, by far the biggest decliner among the Asian currencies tracked by Reuters. 

India's main National Stock Exchange index fell as much as 3.2 per cent, although suspected buying by LIC led the index to recover in the afternoon. 

Foreign investors are paring equity positions, having sold a net $3.6 billion in stocks since the start of June, but still their net purchases so far this year total nearly $12 billion. 

Among the blue chips that fell the most on Wednesday were Axis Bank Ltd and ICICI Bank Ltd, a concern given foreign investors had so far largely held on to their investments in lenders, owning more than 40 per cent of each. 

In bond markets, foreign investors have sold more heavily, with outflows reaching nearly $4.6 billion so far this year. 

Yet the government has so far failed to provide a coherent response, analysts said. Its approval of infrastructure projects on Tuesday was trumped by concerns about the fiscal deficit after India's lower house of parliament this week approved a 1.35 trillion rupees ($19.6 billion) plan to provide cheap gain to the poor. 

In its latest initiative, the government late on Tuesday proposed setting up a task force to look into currency swap agreements, a measure analysts said could bring some relief if carried out in time by reducing market demand for dollars or other major currencies. 

"Let's see what the authorities do, but if the government can come out with some really big currency swap arrangement with some countries, that can be a strong positive," said Uday Bhatt, a forex dealer with UCO Bank in Mumbai.


The Food Security Bill takes us back to the 1970s as lessons of history are ignored

The most powerful politician in the country wants economic growth to be more inclusive and turns increasingly leftward. Her finance minister is worried. There is conflict in the Middle East, with Egypt and Syria at the heart of it. Industrial output is stagnant and the balance of payments situation is worrisome. The government, however, sends contradictory signals. There is nationalisation of wheat trading even as the government introduces direct tax reform legislation and follows it with a big cut in tax rates.

Were we talking about Sonia Gandhi and P Chidambaram? No, we were referring to Indira Gandhi and her finance minister YBChavanin 1973-74, when rhetoric and some decisions were socialist, while grim economic reality pushed the government to slowly unshackle the economy. The passage of Sonia's cherished Food Security Bill in theLokSabha is reminiscent of the early 1970s, when the simultaneous left-right lurch ended with the economy contracting by the end of the decade and subsequent help from the IMF. 

The food bill is a bad idea and does no service to the poor. It fails the country on two critical counts, on economic implications and winning the war against malnutrition. Food security has received enormous budgetary support over the last decade. The price at which the central government gives grain to the poor has remained unchanged for 13 years, even as the economy has grown fivefold along with an increase in average household consumption expenditure during the time. The question today is whether this bill is the need of the hour. No, as this bill makes it almost impossible to bring about any meaningful reform in the overall package of subsidies. All this for cereals, an item of household consumption spending that has been falling. The bill also reduces space a future government will have to reorient spending. 

Recent research has increasingly begun to point to India's sanitation record as an important factor in explaining child stunting. High population density coupled with open defecation by half the country has resulted in a disease environment that leaves India with a child stunting level greater than sub-Saharan Africa, even if infant mortality rates are lower. Sanitation battles, however, cannot be won by grandstanding. India's misfortune today is that her politicians refuse to heed lessons of history.