Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

A rising female politician in India

Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state (were it to be a country on its own it would be the world’s sixth most-populous, will be governed by a woman, and what’s more a Dalit (formerly Untouchable) woman, Mayawati.

Mayawati looks able to form a majority without the help of any other party in the state’s 403-seat house. She has been chief minister of the state three times, but each was a short stint where her party was a junior partner in a coalition.
Her victory can be traced to her decision two years ago to drop her anti-upper caste vitriol and court other social groups. The fiery speaker built an unlikely partnership between Brahmins, at the top of the Hindu caste hierarchy, and Dalits or untouchables, at the bottom. Mayawati’s strategy saw her party field 86 upper-caste Brahmin candidates, compared with 91 Dalits.

Only about half of the women of Uttar Pradesh can read and write – hopefully she might be able to take some steps towards dealing with that.

Children’s books: eco’s in

The Times Education Supplement is reporting that climate change is the theme de jour in children’s books – something about which I’m in two minds: it is great if the kids learn about the issues and start to apply pester power to good purposes, but I think of those Sixties videos or terrified kids huddled under school desks during nuclear bomb drills and wonder if inducing terror among the young is the ideal way to proceed.

I found that story while looking for the front page story that I saw on a news-stand today. It doesn’t seem to be on the web, but the gist was that women at the “new”, post-1992 universities were getting much closer to equal pay than those in older universities. A further demonstration of how difficult entrenched male privilege is to overturn.

Business suggestion – for free

Moving around a bit lately, I’ve been struggling with the fact that if you can’t eat gluten, railway stations are a complete food desert – burgers, bagels, batters, baguettes, everything is wheat-based. (Oddly I’ve noticed the same pattern in France.)

To get something rice-based, you have to go outside the station to the Chinese/Thai/Indian takeway you’ll usually find in the surrounding area.

What’s wrong with say handy rice balls wrapped in egg or tofu, or a simple fried rice, within the station? NOt just for those who can’t eat wheat, but also for those who just fancy a change.

Exploring Tescopoly

I’ve been reading Andrew Simms’ Tescopoly, subtitled “how one shop came out on top and why it matters”. As you might expect from the man associated with the coining of the term “clone high street”, he’s not complimentary. It proved timely since I arrived this afternoon in Poole (Dorset) to find in the local newsagent a petition against a planned Tesco “Metro” on the high street.

The book itself has lots of good data and anecdotes, while being in structure rather loose and unfocused – he keeps getting distracted by broad issues such as food miles and digressing at great length off into those.

Still, some great snippets

* The board game Monopoly was invented by a Quaker called Elizabeth Magie-Phillips in 1903 “to teach the evils of land speculation and the tendency of badly regulated markets to create monopolies”. (p. 1)

* From 1980 to 2000 the overall number of retail outlets fell from 273,000 businesses to 201,000. Specialist shops such as butchers, bakers and fishmongers shut at a rate of about 50 a week between 1997 and 2002. In the two years up to 2003 wholesalers closed at the rate of about six a week. (p.79)

* The number of apple orchards in the UK reportedly halved between 1990 and 2002. In 1930 there were 97,866 hectares of traditional orchards in England. By 2004 there were 16,767 hectares. (p. 81)

* Tesco for the year ending Feb 2006 had over £39bn of revenue, and profit of over £2.2bn. This would put it 55th in the World Bank’s 2005 ranking of nations, above Bangladesh. (p90)

* The Financial Times calculated that by enforcing long payment terms, Tesco was effectively getting a free £2.2bn loan from its suppliers. (p. 129) According to Accountancy Age, Tesco paid only 67% of its invoices below the value of £5,000 on time –even on its own favourable terms. (p. 140)

* In 2004, calculations showed that in the convenience store sector, which employs half a million people, it took turnover of £42,000 to create a job. For superstores the figure is £95,000. That year Tesco, with a turnover of £29bn, employed 250,000 people, while small grocery stores, with a turnover of £21bn, employed double that figure. (p. 162)

You couldn’t make it up…

Really, I can’t do better than tell the story straight:

A soccer game between Muslim imams and Christian priests at the end of a conference to promote interfaith dialogue was canceled Saturday because the teams could not agree on whether women priests should take part….Because we thought it would be a nice conclusion of the conference we didn’t want to call it off, so we decided to stage an all-mens team game instead,” Tveit said. “We realize now that it will be wrong to have a priest team without women.”

Or rather I suspect a strongminded woman explained it to you…

A certain poetic justice

A plan for a huge new coal mine in Australia is likely to be stopped in its tracks by an acute water shortage very possibly related to global warming.