Book Games Indians Play cover

Games Indians Play

Have you read Games Indians Play! by Dr Raghunathan? Very interesting book with pertinent examples of issues we face, many a times overlook and are facing worldwide. In that book he says – “We are individually very smart but collectively dumb”. I think we are collectively dumb and therefore we are in the economy-related mess we have created.

I did not know that I would be referring to my new year blog so early in this year. Newspapers of 3-Feb-2012 made me do so. The news was about the 2G scam which had been under scrutiny for a long time now. In my opinion the verdict clearly stated that power corrupts and it gives you confidence that you can get away with murders too (many such cases pending in India)!

I thought hard – really very hard – to find a solution. I think I will go back to TRIZ (theory of Inventive Problem Solving) to decide conflicts and resolving them. Until I find a one size fit all ‘man made’ solution, I could think of only one possibility. This solution is self restraint, and owning responsibility to make sure we are morally correct.

This word ‘Moral’ reminds me of my economics and business ethics class of MBA where we discussed moral hazards with Prof Mankad and Prof Arun Ramanathan. I was reading this article on Moral hazards at Wharton. The article talks about authorities and new stringent rules. This regulatory authority will tomorrow need another (other set of rules) and so on and so forth. How long will we create such authorities? Moral hazards would end very easily when each one takes responsibility and become accountable for his/her action. This accountability has to come on each level and for all the actions. The problem lies with a reality that – ‘We are individually very smart but collectively dumb’. This ‘being individually smart’ begets moral hazard. The solution for this problem is one’s own self. Take responsibility own it and be accountable. Perhaps initially we (as individual) will fail but collectively we will start succeeding.

I am hopeful that once we start from ourselves (individually), each one of us would be able to avoid situations where we would talk about Newspapers of 3-Feb-12 (2G Scam), other scams and the bad shape of world economy. Hoping that we would save our energy to concentrate on something constructive.


KRD Pravin

Here I am supposed to write about myself. Professionally, I am quite serious and a workaholic; personally I am an individual who enjoys what he does and takes life as it comes. I am passionate about my work and actions and empathetically careful, attached and committed to them. All this makes me a fierce competitive professional and yet a compassionate soul, the Yin and the Yang together. Balancing is the art to be practiced using the middle path. From - http://business2buddha.com/about/

6 Comments

Rummuser · February 6, 2012 at 8:06 pm

V R’s book is indeed very interesting and holds up a mirror to all Indians. I only hope that many would read it.

The message in the book is simple. Indians have double standards. We expect the other guy to be ethical but we can be unethical if it serves our individual purposes. One sees this in actual life all the time.

Morals? What yuga are you living in my young friend?

KRD Pravin · February 7, 2012 at 9:53 am

Uncleji you are right, the book shows mirror to us. However, I think on a macro level the same is happening in other countries too. The Moral Hazard the world of economists is talking about similar case as book describes for Indians – levels are different, scales are different.

As you rightly said in our last meeting (it reminds me of you visiting Mumbai soon :)) – what about the Bankers? It is also about senior executives (worldcon, Union Carbide for example). We cannot just create regulations and rules, those can be simply broker. The accountability has to come from within…

Does Law inform or enforce culture? « theMarketSoul ©1999 – 2012 · February 15, 2012 at 3:21 am

[…] Individually smart, collectively dumb! (business2buddha.wordpress.com) […]

landslide | Business to the Buddha · November 1, 2014 at 1:07 am

[…] Watch that video once again – remember Economy goes down like this. Have we ever questioned the actual reasons for these things? Dig deeper! This digging deeper to make some extra pound creates the problem. Economy crumbles like this when we do not nurture it the way we – as a collective group – fail to maintain the hill which just crumbled in the video. As capitalists too – we are individually smart collectively dumb. […]

Why socialism fails? NYAY - Business to the Buddha · April 19, 2019 at 8:48 pm

[…] And the last question to you – if you were Sarala or Kishore what would you prefer – free money or a dignified earning, up skilling and job opportunity? If your answer is former – read individually smart collectively dumb. […]

Why socialism fails? NYAY - Business to the Buddha · April 20, 2019 at 1:42 am

[…] And the last question to you – if you were Sarala or Kishore what would you prefer – free money or a dignified earning, up skilling and job opportunity? If your answer is former – read individually smart collectively dumb. […]

Leave a Comment