Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Progress without Peace -The unfinished Journey of Humanity !

                            A civilisation at Cross Road- Between Dharma and Materialism 

                      "The very spring and root of honesty and virtue lie in good education. "

                                                                                       Plutarch Greek Philosopher. 


Where are we heading in this restless march towards material prosperity?

Where is Sanatana Dharma, where is Divinity, where is Humanity in this growing culture of money, power, greed and endless consumption?

Having lived nearly eight decades and witnessed the transformation of this country through years of struggle, sacrifice, simplicity, discipline and gradual progress, one cannot help but introspect with deep concern about the direction in which society is moving. The change is not merely economic or technological; it is civilisational, cultural and moral.

Science and technology were expected to enhance the quality of life, strengthen human relationships, reduce suffering and create a more peaceful and dignified society. Instead, despite unprecedented comforts and conveniences, the human mind appears more disturbed, impatient, insecure and dissatisfied than ever before. We have created abundance, yet peace is becoming scarce. We have built systems of communication, yet hearts are drifting apart. We have expanded knowledge, yet wisdom and restraint seem to be diminishing.

It appears as though humanity is seated before a magnificent feast into which, unknowingly, some poison has been mixed — the poison of greed, arrogance, selfishness, intolerance, moral indifference and uncontrolled desire. The tragedy is not merely that these tendencies exist, but that they are increasingly being normalised, celebrated and even projected as signs of success.

Sanatana Dharma never opposed prosperity or progress. It recognised worldly pursuits as part of life, but always under the guiding light of Dharma, self-discipline, compassion, truth and responsibility towards society and all living beings. Wealth without values becomes dangerous. Power without character becomes destructive. Freedom without self-restraint becomes chaos.

The greatest strength of this civilisation has never been military power or economic might alone. Its enduring strength has been its spiritual vision — the profound understanding that all existence is interconnected, that the same divine energy flows through all forms of life, and that humanity is one family. This spirit of coexistence, tolerance, non-violence, truth and accommodation made this civilisation unique and respected across the world.

Yet today, one sees increasing aggression in thought, speech and conduct; erosion of ethics in public and private life; growing insensitivity towards fellow beings; and a dangerous tendency to measure human worth only through wealth, status and influence. In the race to possess everything, mankind risks losing itself.

Still, despite all distortions and disturbances, the country continues to survive, progress and renew itself. This itself reflects the invisible strength of the Divine and the enduring foundation of Dharma deeply embedded in society. The patience, tolerance and resilience of ordinary people continue to hold the social fabric together even amidst enormous pressures and provocations.

The need of the hour is therefore not merely economic reforms or technological advancement, but moral and spiritual introspection. Humanity must pause and ask:

  • Are we creating better human beings or merely smarter consumers?
  • Are we strengthening civilisation or weakening its soul?
  • Are we using knowledge to elevate life or merely to dominate and exploit?
  • Are we leaving behind a world of harmony for future generations or a world of anxiety, conflict and emptiness?

True progress cannot be measured only by GDP, infrastructure or accumulation of wealth. Real progress lies in the quality of human conduct, purity of thought, compassion towards fellow beings, respect for truth, discipline in life and the ability to coexist peacefully with nature and society.

The world does not merely need more intelligent minds; it urgently needs awakened consciences.

Humanity can survive with dignity, peace and harmony only when it rediscovers and re-establishes the eternal values that sustained civilisation through centuries — Dharma, Truth, Compassion, Humility, Self-restraint and Reverence for Life. Material progress without moral and spiritual balance has created unprecedented wealth, but also deep unrest, anxiety, violence, greed and erosion of human sensitivity.

The crisis before mankind today is not merely economic, political or technological; it is fundamentally a crisis of values, character and consciousness. Education has increasingly become a means for earning a livelihood, but not for learning how to live wisely, ethically and responsibly. Societies are producing skilled minds, but not necessarily balanced human beings.

It is therefore time for governments, educational institutions, families, social organisations and spiritual institutions to seriously deliberate upon introducing value-based orientation as an essential component of human development. Humanity must consciously educate, train and inspire people in all walks of life about the meaning, qualities and benefits of a good and dharmic life. 

Children and youth should be taught not merely competition and acquisition, but also cooperation, discipline, honesty, compassion, duty, simplicity, respect for nature and responsibility towards society. Professional excellence without ethical grounding can become dangerous both for society and civilisation.

The essence of Dharmic life  should not just remain in books , speeches , and an empty  propaganda to gain brownee points . The true essence of a Dharmic life lies in daily, grounded practice rather than mere performative action. Living Dharma is about integrating ethical principles—such as Satya (truthfulness), Ahimsa (non-violence), and Seva (selfless service)—into one's everyday choices, interactions, and community work. SIMPLE LIVING, HIGH THINKING with very Noble Actions in Private and Public life make the society and the nation strong and pave the way for fast growth, equitable , all round economic and social welfare everywhere to the satisfaction of the body, mind and soul and enjoy the energy to the full extent.    

When philosophy translates into action, it shifts from empty rhetoric to meaningful impact, fostering both personal growth and a more compassionate society. It is about quiet integrity and taking responsibility for one's community rather than seeking public recognition.  It must  be widely circulated and practised through education systems, public discourse, community life, governance and workplace culture. Ethical conduct, integrity, social responsibility and humane values should receive due recognition and weightage even in career development and leadership evaluation. Nations that ignore moral foundations may achieve temporary prosperity, but cannot ensure lasting peace, stability and human happiness.

The future of civilisation depends not only on technological advancement, but on the capacity of human beings to live with wisdom, restraint, mutual respect and higher purpose. The need of the hour is not merely smarter humans, but nobler humans.

Otherwise, material prosperity without moral direction may ultimately weaken the very foundations upon which human civilisation stands.

Samastha Loka Sukhino Bhavanthu. May the Concept Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam be a reality in letter and spirit worth emulating and practising universally. 

T V G Krishnan

(Personal Views) 

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Economic Patriotism PM's Saptha Swara for a Sustainable, Strong and self Reliant Economy.

 

PM’s Saptha Swaras for a Sustainable, Strong and Self-Reliant Economy

The Honourable Prime Minister’s recent articulation of the “Saptha Swaras” for strengthening the Indian economy should not be treated merely as pleasant words or temporary austerity suggestions. They represent a profound and practical framework for building a sustainable, resilient, self-reliant and shock-resistant economy founded on India’s own strengths, resources, discipline, competence and collective determination.

At a time when the global economy is increasingly exposed to geopolitical tensions, supply-chain disruptions, inflationary pressures, environmental stress and social uncertainties, the need for internal economic strength has become more important than ever before. Nations that depend excessively on external resources, imported lifestyles and unsustainable consumption patterns remain vulnerable to forces beyond their control.

The Prime Minister’s Saptha Swaras therefore deserve to be understood as seven guiding principles for long-term national stability and economic security.

These seven swaras are:

  1. Work from Home wherever feasible

  2. Less dependence on Gold

  3. Reduced Fuel consumption

  4. Greater use of Public Transport

  5. Reduced use of Cooking Oil

  6. Less Foreign Travel

  7. Less dependence on Chemicals, Fertilisers and Foreign Products, with greater emphasis on Natural Farming and Swadeshi

If implemented sincerely and systematically, these measures can significantly reduce avoidable imports, conserve precious foreign exchange, improve public health, reduce environmental degradation, strengthen domestic production and enhance national resilience.

The philosophy behind these swaras is simple yet transformative: disciplined consumption, intelligent living and responsible economic behaviour can become instruments of national development.

India possesses enormous inner strength — human resources, entrepreneurial ability, agricultural capacity, technological competence, spiritual wisdom and cultural resilience. What is required is not merely economic growth, but economic character built on self-confidence, moderation, productivity and social responsibility.

The success of these Saptha Swaras, however, depends upon collective participation. Just as a great musical concert requires harmony between various instruments, the success of national transformation requires coordinated support from the Legislature, Executive and Judiciary, along with educational institutions, regulators, infrastructure providers, religious leaders, social reformers, businesses and citizens from all walks of life.

Educational institutions must inculcate disciplined and sustainable living. Regulators and policymakers must encourage responsible production and consumption patterns. Financial institutions should support productive and environmentally sustainable sectors. Religious and social leaders can help shape behavioural transformation by promoting moderation, ethics and national responsibility.

Most importantly, citizens themselves must recognise that economic patriotism is not merely a slogan but a way of life.

The time has come for India to move from excessive consumerism towards constructive contribution; from dependence towards self-reliance; from wasteful imitation towards confident Swadeshi-oriented development.

If pursued with sincerity, these Saptha Swaras can become not merely policy suggestions, but the foundation of a stronger, healthier, more balanced and more humane economy — one capable of withstanding global uncertainties while ensuring dignity, opportunity and security for all.

Such an approach alone can ultimately help India move towards the larger ideal of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — the world as one family — through strength, stability, wisdom and shared prosperity.

Samastha Loka Sukhino Bhavanthu

T V G Krishnan

(personal Views)


Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Re-Examining Inflation Targeting, Cost of Living, Productive Growth and the Strategic Role of Gold in Economic Stability

 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Banks Loans and Recovery Agents at what Cost?

  Banks Loans and Recovery Agents at what Cost?

Apropos the editorial “Off the Tough Route to Loan Recovery” (ET, 1 May 2026), the growing reliance on stringent recovery measures points to a deeper malaise—not weak laws, but weak credit culture within the banking system. The saying that one can take a horse to water but twenty cannot make it drink holds true to bankers approach to credit. The problem originates at the appraisal stage. Credit is too often extended without a disciplined assessment of cash flows, viability, and repayment capacity. Lending, in several instances, has become exposure-driven rather than need-based. The outcome is predictable: stressed assets that later demand “tough routes” for recovery. All at a very high cost indeed.

Equally paradoxical is the continued exclusion of genuinely viable small borrowers. Despite decades of nationalisation, financial inclusion initiatives, and advances in technology, the banking system still shows limited sensitivity to the needs of the poor and informal sector. While larger exposures have at times benefited from relaxed discipline, deserving small borrowers struggle for access. The bankers are yet to get the feel of the poor and feel for the poor is a sad story. 

The solution lies not merely in tightening recovery mechanisms, but in reorienting banking practices. Credit must be anchored to cash flows, supported by effective use of technology and artificial intelligence for appraisal and monitoring. Integrating lending with transaction and deposit accounts can align credit with real economic activity and improve repayment behaviour.

Banks must return to basics—mobilising deposits responsibly and deploying credit prudently across all viable sectors. A system that lends with discipline will not have to rely excessively on coercive recovery methods. 

A shift from reactive recovery to proactive credit management is essential to restore both efficiency and credibility in the banking system.

Yours faithfully,
 T V Gopalakrishnan

( This letter sent to ET found published with modifications on 4/5/26)


Friday, May 1, 2026

Last Mile connectivity . Can we not have a better planning and enhanced efficiency and earn the goodwill and cooperation of people.?

 

Last-Mile Connectivity: The Missing Link in Urban Mobility Bengaluru. 


The city’s traffic crisis is no longer an inconvenience—it is a daily erosion of productivity, health, and civic dignity. Despite being projected as a global technology hub, the lived reality reflects administrative indifference and a worrying lack of coordinated action.

The problem is not merely one of infrastructure, but of governance. Roads choked by garbage dumping, rampant encroachments, and indiscriminate parking have turned mobility into a struggle. Add to this poorly maintained roads, unchecked potholes, and unauthorized speed breakers, and the result is avoidable chaos.

Equally concerning is the collapse of traffic discipline. Signal violations, reckless criss-crossing, and disregard for basic road safety norms have become routine. This is not a behavioural issue alone—it reflects weak enforcement and absence of sustained monitoring.

However, meaningful change does not require grand projects. It demands focused and well coordinated  execution of simple, practical measures:

  • Keep roads clear of garbage and strictly prevent illegal parking and encroachments.
  • Repair potholes promptly and remove unauthorized road obstructions.
  • Enforce traffic rules consistently, without exception or interference.
  • Strengthen last-mile connectivity by improving access to bus stands, metro stations, and railway hubs through smaller, well-managed feeder services.
  • Ensure coordination among traffic police, municipal authorities, and transport agencies for real-time problem-solving.
  • Encourage institutions and offices to promote pooled transport and reduce single-occupancy vehicle usage.

Last-mile connectivity remains the weakest link in the city’s transport ecosystem. Without addressing it, investments in metros and major infrastructure will continue to underdeliver.

What is needed is not more discussion, but visible accountability and time-bound action. The city deserves governance that matches its aspirations. Every citizen, in both personal and official roles, has a direct responsibility to improve the quality of life in our cities. Nowhere is this more visible than on our roads. Safe, reliable mobility is not just an infrastructure issue—it is a matter of discipline, accountability, and civic sense.

Traffic chaos is not created by systems alone but by everyday violations we choose to ignore. Lane indiscipline, signal jumping, and disregard for pedestrians erode not only safety but also dignity in public life.

If we seek better roads and smoother traffic, the starting point is not elsewhere—it is within us. Self-discipline, consistently practiced, is the foundation on which any meaningful improvement in quality of life must be built.

 A comfortable, peaceful and satisfying life does not come from expectations alone—it comes from responsible conduct.Each one of us can contribute by following rules, respecting public spaces, cooperating with authorities, and acting with discipline in our daily lives.

When citizens become partners in governance rather than passive critics, the quality of life improves for everyone.
Let us not wait for change—let us be the reason for it.

TVG Krishnan

(Personal Views)

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

New Provisioning Norms of RBI A welcome initiative for a very healthy , Stable and sound banking system.

 Strengthening Credit Discipline through a Precautionary Margin Reserve Framework

The recent regulatory stance of the Reserve Bank of India marks a significant and long-overdue shift towards reinforcing credit discipline and restoring integrity within the banking system. This approach, focused on early recognition of stress, prudent lending, and accountability, has the potential to materially improve the quality of bank balance sheets while aligning borrower behavior with responsible financial conduct.

In this context, it is important to recall that as early as 2004, the book “Management of Non-Performing Advances in Public Sector Banks”,dedicated to the Reserve Bank of India, published by the Indian Institute of Banking and Finance had articulated a structured and forward-looking framework to address the persistent challenge of non-performing assets. The central recommendation was the creation of a Precautionary Margin Reserve, built through small, risk-calibrated contributions from borrowers, supplemented by contributions from banks and, where appropriate, supported within a regulatory framework.

The essence of this proposal lies in shifting from a reactive to a pre-emptive and self-sustaining mechanism for managing credit risk. By linking contributions to borrower risk profiles and credit ratings, such a reserve would:

  • Instill stronger credit discipline among borrowers
  • Encourage more prudent and accountable lending practices by banks
  • Create a dedicated buffer to absorb emerging stress and facilitate timely resolution of bad debts
  • Reduce the recurring burden of recapitalization on the exchequer and other stakeholders

Importantly, this approach internalizes the cost of credit risk within the banking ecosystem itself, thereby sparing depositors, taxpayers, and the broader economy from the cyclical impact of mounting NPAs.

The current regulatory environment—characterized by tighter supervision, improved risk assessment frameworks, and emphasis on provisioning—provides an opportune moment to revisit and operationalize this concept. A well-governed Precautionary Margin Reserve Fund, aligned with existing prudential norms and supported by transparent oversight, can serve as a complementary layer to the present provisioning systems.

Had such a mechanism been institutionalized earlier, the magnitude and recurrence of the NPA problem could have been significantly mitigated. Nevertheless, the present shift in regulatory philosophy offers a timely opportunity to adopt a more durable and systemic solution.

A calibrated introduction of this framework—possibly on a pilot basis—would not only strengthen the resilience of bank balance sheets but also contribute to long-term financial stability and sustainable economic growth.

T V G Krishnan.

(Personal Views)


Thursday, April 23, 2026

Reframing the Governance of Hospitals particularly Corporate Hospitals in India.

 

 Reframing the Governance of Corporate Hospitals in India

Background

Corporate hospitals have become a significant pillar of India’s healthcare delivery system, contributing to advanced medical infrastructure, specialised care, and medical tourism. However, their operational philosophy has increasingly mirrored that of conventional commercial enterprises, where profit maximisation and cost minimisation dominate decision-making.

While financial sustainability is necessary, applying a purely commercial framework to healthcare risks compromising ethics, patient trust, and equitable access to care. Healthcare is fundamentally distinct from other industries—it deals with human life, dignity, and societal well-being.

Problem Statement

There is growing public concern regarding:

  • Over-commercialisation of healthcare services
  • Unnecessary diagnostics and procedures driven by revenue targets
  • Lack of transparency in billing and pricing
  • Financial exploitation during medical emergencies
  • Erosion of trust between patients and healthcare providers
  • Taxation policy for Health sector should be totally different from all Other Sectors. 

Such trends not only burden individuals financially but also weaken the credibility of the healthcare system as a whole.

Policy Objective

To establish a differentiated governance and regulatory framework for corporate hospitals that ensures:

  • Ethical, patient-centric care
  • Transparency and accountability
  • Financial sustainability aligned with social responsibility
  • Restoration of public trust in institutional healthcare .                 

Key policy Recommendations 

 1. Patient-Centric Governance Framework
Mandate that all clinical decisions be based solely on medical necessity. Introduce institutional policies that explicitly prohibit revenue-linked clinical targets.

2. Ethical Standards and Accountability

Develop measurable indicators for compassion, ethical conduct, and patient outcomes. Incorporate these into hospital accreditation, licensing, and periodic evaluations.

3. Transparent and Standardised Pricing

  • Enforce clear disclosure of treatment costs
  • Standardise pricing for common procedures where feasible
  • Require itemised billing with justification for major interventions

4. Independent Regulatory Oversight
Establish or strengthen independent regulatory bodies to:

  • Audit hospital practices and billing patterns
  • Address patient grievances swiftly
  • Publish performance ratings based on ethics, outcomes, and patient satisfaction—not just infrastructure
  • Introduce Ombudsman Scheme to redress Complaints of patients. 

5. Balanced Financial Model
Encourage a hybrid model where:

  • Profitability supports sustainability and reinvestment
  • A defined portion of capacity/services is allocated for affordable care
  • Incentives are provided for hospitals demonstrating social responsibility

6. Holistic Healthcare Delivery
Promote expansion beyond curative care to include:

  • Preventive healthcare and early diagnosis programs
  • Mental health and counselling services
  • Patient education and post-treatment support

7. Medical Tourism with Ethical Positioning
Position India as a global destination for value-based healthcare, combining clinical excellence with humane treatment and transparent pricing.

Implementation Approach

  • Ministry-led task force with representation from healthcare professionals, economists, ethicists, and patient groups
  • Phased regulatory reforms with pilot programs in major metropolitan areas
  • Integration with existing accreditation systems and digital health platforms
  • Continuous monitoring through publicly accessible dashboards Expected Outcomes
  • Improved trust in corporate healthcare institutions
  • Reduction in unethical medical practices
  • Greater affordability and transparency in healthcare delivery
  • Enhanced global reputation of India’s healthcare system
  • Alignment of healthcare growth with societal well-being
  • Taxation policy needs total review to reduce the cost of treatment , increase the trust in Hospitals and enhance affordability with or without Insurance. 

Conclusion 

Corporate hospitals are not merely business entities—they are custodians of human life. Their governance must reflect this responsibility. A shift from profit-driven healthcare to value-driven healthcare is not just desirable; it is essential for building a just, equitable, and trusted healthcare system in India.

Samastha Loka Sukhino Bhavanthu.

TVG Krishnan

(personal Views)