Archive for the ‘Indian’ category

1MALAYSIA Economics Seminar by MIBC

April 25th, 2010
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received via email:

The Malaysian Indian Business Co-operative is organising a half-day seminar entitled 1MALAYSIA ECONOMICS SEMINAR on Saturday, the 15th of May, 2010 at the Auditorium at Wisma Paradise in 63 Jalan Ampang, Kuala Lumpur. This is part of our obligations to our community who are starved of business opportunities and lack the knowledge to access available funds.

We have three eminent speakers and trust members of the community will benefit from the knowledge to be imparted at the Seminar. The tentative program for the day is as follows:

Time Topic Speaker
9.00am -9.45am Sources of Funds En. Fozian Ismail of Small and Medium Enterprises Corporation
9.45am – 10.00am Q & A
10.00am- 10.20am Tea Break
10.25am -11.10am Seeking New
Business Opportunities Dato’Pardip Kumar Kukreja, CEO Paradise
Group
11.10am – 11.25am Q & A
11.30am – 12.15pm Access to Finance Mr. Thomas Tan of Bank Negara
12.15pm -12.30pm Q & A
12.30pm – 12.50pm Panel Discussion Participants to seek clarification on related topics
1.00pm Close

The fee for this useful seminar is only RM70.00 to cover costs of venue and refreshments. Persons wishing to participate are requested to send in an email to ganapathy_ramasamy@yahoo.com

Payment of RM 70/- should be made thru cheque/Money Order in the name of “KOPERASI PENIAGA-PENIAGA INDIA MALAYSIA BERHAD” and posted to Malaysian Indian Business Co-operative, 5.02 A, Level 5, Wisma Paradise, 63 Jalan Ampang, 50450 Kuala Lumpur before the seminar date.
You may also make online payment to CIMB Account No: 14260074623525. If you are making online payment please send me an email or fax the receipt to 03 7981 0424.

As seats are limited allocation will be on a first come basis.
Rgds

Ganapathy Ramasamy
Organising Chairman
H/P 013 3691021

Statistics on UPSR results

April 24th, 2010
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This news came out some time back. Blogging it for future use.
Meanwhile, Subramaniam, who is also MIC secretary-general, said children of Malaysian Indians aged between 4 and 6 years old should be sent to pre-school as they would be able to learn with ease when they move on to primary school.
“Currently, 10 to 15 per cent of students in Tamil schools who move to Year Four do not have a basic grasp of reading, writing and calculating.
“If we start them young, they would be able to pick these skills well when they move to upper primary classes.
“For students sitting the Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah, 40 per cent of them now fail at least one of the seven subjects they take.
“Our aim is to bring the figure down to 20 per cent and in the long-term, ensure all students from Tamil schools achieve a 100 per cent pass in the exam.”

After a Cabinet Committee, we have a Taskforce

April 24th, 2010
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I’m sure readers will remember the cabinet committee set up in 2008 to solve problems among the Indian community. Well, recently, a task force was set up as well, headed by Dr Subra, the HR minister. Its known as the Special Implementation Taskforce which will be reporting to the cabinet committee. Its purpose is “to monitor and strengthen service delivery and implementation to ensure that poor and low-income Indians take part in government programmes”.
Tamil Nesan reported that the Prime Minister’s Office will monitor efforts to help the poor and low-income groups in the Indian community through a taskforce.
It said the taskforce would ensure that the groups could benefit from the Government’s efforts to help them in poverty eradication programmes, getting affordable housing and participating in educational programmes.
Dr Denison Jayasooria has been appointed secretary of the task force while Human Resources Minister Datuk Dr S. Subrama­niam, who is also a member of the Cabinet Committee on Indian affairs, would head the task force.
He said the formation of the task force proved the Government’s commitment in assisting the community.
I hope the taskforce will come out with regular reports to indicate what they have done.

Grant to train entrepreneurs coming soon

April 24th, 2010
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Interested? Join your respective state Indian Chambers. Why? Because the training is for chambers’ members only.

Some of the state chambers info is available here:

http://www.maicci.org.my/chambers_08.htm

Here’s the news article:

Half of the RM2mil allocation from the Government to train budding Indian entrepreneurs is expected to be given out within the next few weeks, said Indian business chamber leader Datuk K.K. Eswaran.

The allocation marked the first time the Government was fully funding a training programme run by the Malaysian Associated Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Maicci), said Eswaran.

“The RM2mil grant to Maicci will be used to train 500 Indian entrepreneurs as announced by the Prime Minister last October.

“If we are able to run the training successfully, the other RM1mil will also be given to us. Not only that, more funding will follow,” Eswaran told reporters yesterday.

The Maicci president added that some courses offered would include basic accounting and business management.

Many small businesses did not practise proper book-keeping and auditing, Eswaran said.

“More importantly, the training will teach entrepreneurs proper business governance,” he said.

Eswaran said Maicci would be forming a special task force to draw up a proper module for the training to ensure courses offered would be relevant for the participants.

He pledged transparency and accountability in the use of the allocation, saying an audit report would be presented to Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak and Maicci members.

Eswaran said only state chamber members would be eligible for the training programme. Those interested in participating should join their respective state chambers.

Asked about the timing of the allocation, Eswaran said the funding was not a political ploy.

How much money do you save each month?

April 20th, 2010
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Some of us may have had parents in the similar situation as below about 30-40 years ago.  I think back then, people could scrimp and still survive, and hopefully try to provide a better living for their kids. But in current high cost of living, is it possible to save something for the future, let alone spend for children’s education, good food, or invest in own house?

Which brings me to the question: how much do you save every month in terms of percentage of your income (either individual or household)? Is it 0%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30% or high as 60%? Do you have a saving plan that you follow or its an ad-hoc kind of thing?  How much do you think you should save every month in terms of absolute amount? RM100? RM200? RM500? Rm1000?

Why do you save money? I guess its for use in the future – buying house, children education, retirement, buying luxury/dream stuff, medical cover, for emergency, and so on.

Don’t worry, I’m not going to preach about some savings/investment scheme 🙂 Just blogged about this out of curiosity.  I’m sure all of us have bills to pay, loans to settle, transport costs, communication expenses and so on. Money just flies out so easily.

Well, read the article I mentioned and think about the poorer section of our community.

Extract of an article from Malaysiakini:

Clutching her payslip for the previous month in her right hand and a paring knife in her left, S Letchumi rants about how tough life is on the estate where she has lived for 25 years,

She points at the RM217 take-home pay printed on her payslip, agonising over her family’s monthly trials with three children in secondary school and two sets of sickly parents to care for, not to mention putting food on the table.

“We have supported Barisan (Nasional) for so long. Every time they come here they tell us to vote for them, they promise they will help us. But after they win, they never show their faces here until they need our votes again,” she said, absent-mindedly brandishing her knife.

Letchumi, 42, and a group of women in Ladang Kerling were getting ready to cook food brought in by Puteri Umno in time for a 4pm gathering scheduled at their temple on Monday.

Mariamah Subramaniam, 39 and a single mother of four, said the workers don’t mind the “gifts” that political parties normally bring while campaigning, but that they would much rather have a concrete solution to their poverty.

“It’s nice. PKR gave us some help with rice and some money for our children’s bus fare, but they can’t just give this year and stop giving after that. Of course it’s better than nothing… BN didn’t give us a single thing when they came,” she said, bouncing her nine-month-old daughter on her hip.

Depending on the weather, estate workers say they can earn as much as RM890 in a good month or as low as RM100 when the rains come.

Second-generation estate retiree Ragaraman Kolican, 58, is still poor after tapping rubber for 29 years, and not for lack of trying.

“I was born here. I grew up here. I continued to work the estate after my father died, but with my earnings being so low, I can’t afford to buy anything, not a house, not land.

“This whole area was 100 percent BN for a long time. In the past, even if you say you will cut our throats, we would still vote BN. But the BN politicians never keep their promises. 

“Palanivel held the seat for so long and every election he told us he will listen to all our problems after he wins, but he never came,” he said, referring to former four-term Hulu Selangor parliamentarian G Palanivel, who lost the seat to PKR in 2008.

No love for MIC

Thirumurthy Appalanaidu (left), 48, admitted that the estate workers know little of BN candidate P Kamalanathan but stressed that they have already made up their minds.

“We are not angry with (premier) Najib (Abdul Razak), but we know very well that MIC has not done anything for us.

“We read the news, we know that Najib announced (allocations of) millions (of ringgit) to help the poor but when the money reaches MIC it does not go down to the people.”

Thirumurthy added that PKR has done more for them over the last two years than the BN has over the decades that it held Hulu Selangor.

“If BN had helped us we can vote for them, but without helping us how do we vote for them?” he asked.