Sunday, September 18, 2011

Driving job creation - An open letter to the President


President Barak Obama                                                 Sep18, 2011
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20500

CC: Rep Frank Wolf, Sen Jim Webb, Sen Mark Warner, Speaker John Boehner, Rep Eric Cantor, Sen Harry Reid, Sen Mitch McConnell, Mr. Jeffrey Immelt, Press

Project Simple Reinvention

Mr. President,
While I am optimistic about the future, I am tired and frustrated as are millions of Americans about the political futility of the various plans proposed to reduce employment and kick start our economy. I do not believe they will work as neither sides appears to want to work together. So I am proposing to you Project Simple Reinvention; a simple, yet powerful plan that leverages the private sector to do what only the private sector can do…Hire Millions.

This is a simple plan to break the enormous dependency on the government to reduce unemployment. The plan is to empower the private sector to become the driver but in a targeted manner. This targeted and impactful attack on unemployment should not only reduce unemployment to 5% but create a real and sustaining demand for products and services to grow and expand our economy. The framework of the plan is;

  1. Encourage some 195,000 private US companies/employers who have more than 100 employees in America to hire 6 million by October 31, 2011.
  2. While on average each of the employers would need to hire 32 employees, reality is they could hire between 1-50 depending upon their size, industry, community and other criteria. The levels of employment we need by each individual employer would be minuscule compared to their overall size. This will minimize risk and costs to the employers and encouraging them to participate.  
  3. This is perhaps the only place we need the government to support it and that is to provide a tax credit per newly hired employee up to 50% of their wages for the first six months or until April 30, 2012. This will help the employers offset some Q4 costs while reducing risk.
4.      Finally, participating employers should commit that they will not eliminate existing positions to make room for new employees hired as part of Project Simple Reinvention for at least 6 months.

The impact of the plan would be so powerful that I envision the following to happen:
  1. It will reduce our unemployment to normal levels while boosting revenues without having to raise taxes in as little as 30 – 60 days.
  2. It will generate demand and reignite ancillary industries from retail, restaurants, cars, travel and tourism.
  3. The timing will be particularly impactful coming in ahead of the holiday season, ensuring more kids this holiday season will be visited by Santa Claus.

While I am convinced that this is the sort of Bazooka we need, to end the vicious business and political cycle we are in, it requires a planned and coordinated strike, one that is unprecedented in nature. Putting 6 million Americans back to work in 30 days across close to 200,000 employers will require leadership, trust and enormous resolve. All of which I believe we have. Please keep government involvement to a minimum and let the private sector do what they can.

Wish you the best and God Bless the United States of America.

Sincerely

Monday, July 18, 2011

Pakistanis - something to learn from?

I was reading the journal this weekend and my eye caught an article titled "Why My Father Hated India". I read it to find the usual litany of why Pakistanis hate Indians, nothing unique given it stems form a series of historic occurrences.....no different than why the Palestinians and Israelis don't get along (an understatement I realize), or the Greeks and Turks and more. People unwilling to let the past go, to live in the current and plans for the future...what a radical notion! This is the 21st century where one would think we as humans have evolved to a point where we can transcend hate and power to something more positive with that energy….yes I recognize it is ideal talk and not practical.

But it gave me pause to think about my own thinking having evolved over the last couple of decades to a point where I now feel we should be thinking differently and drastically to help “SAVE” Pakistan. Growing up in India and going to school there, I was surrounded by an anti-Pakistani feeling. The history that was taught suggested that India fought 3 wars (many more since) and won them all. The Bollywood movies invariably had the bad guys from Pakistan, all terrorism equated to Pakistan….even when India got beat in cricket by a onetime superior Pakistan cricket team we found a way to rationalize the devil in it. When I moved to business school in the UK, I stayed in a school residence where 7 of us bunked together. My house mates where a bunch of fun loving Greeks who focused more on Ouzo than whatever it was they were there to study, a kindly Canadian and Singaporean and yes a Pakistani doctor. The good doctor was there to learn business so he could go back to Pakistan and work in hospital management to improve the condition of healthcare in his country. Given the 20 years of my anti-Pakistani mindset, I generally ignored the good doctor and one could have also felt I was rude to him. Over the next couple of months, we did bump in to each other more often as we were in the same class, same house and used the same kitchen. Long story short we got in to debates and it was not long before I learned that his school in Karachi taught him that Pakistan engaged in 3 wars with India and that they; Pakistan won them all. I was shocked and aggravated at the lies that they were being taught...the good doctor felt similarly about what we were taught in India. Then it began to dawn upon me as I spoke to him more and learnt about his life, his family and more…yes here comes the cliché….there was more in common than not. When I got past the fact that he was the big bad Pakistani, I found him to be a really good person who was more open minded than I was, taught me a few things like tolerance, the view from the other side and to cook some mean Pakistani curries. We stayed in touch for as long as he lived in the UK and then drifted apart. I hope he is doing well and has managed to make a difference in his country…god knows they need it.  When I moved to Manchester, I found that the folks of Pakistani origin where more friendly and helpful than my Indian brothers. While my thinking kept evolving based on these experiences, I leaned more and more on the fact that geographic affiliations is not a reflection of who you really are. Not all Indians are good and not all Pakistanis evil…..I imagine some of my friends of Indian origin will consider me to be a pariah and expect some stick for it, but it is not right to perpetuate a false sterotype, when stereotyping by itself is flawed. With so much information available....ignorance is not an acceptable excuse to learn more.


Pakistan has many problems and would be a dissertation on its own to consider what is wrong and how to fix it. I have spoken to many about Pakistan including my own family who have some really drastic solutions….none of which I subscribe to.  However the purpose of this short blog was to share my own evolution based on interacting with people from Pakistan. I was disturbed that people in an official capacity use the word hate and their families would perpetuate that sentiment..on both sides of that border. So this is my tiny effort to spread tolerance….not love, certainly not hate….but tolerance and patience to learn the other side’s story before jumping to conclusions.