Monday, 30 January 2017

Causes of Poverty




Poverty is the state for the majority of the world’s people and nations. Why is this? Is it enough to blame poor people for their own predicament? Have they been lazy, made poor decisions, and been solely responsible for their plight? What about their governments? Have they pursued policies that actually harm successful development? Such causes of poverty and inequality are no doubt real. But deeper and more global causes of poverty are often less discussed.
Behind the increasing interconnectedness promised by globalization are global decisions, policies, and practices. These are typically influenced, driven, or formulated by the rich and powerful. These can be leaders of rich countries or other global actors such as multinational corporations, institutions, and influential people.
In the face of such enormous external influence, the governments of poor nations and their people are often powerless. As a result, in the global context, a few get wealthy while the majority struggle.
The poorest people will also have less access to health, education and other services. Problems of hunger, malnutrition and disease afflict the poorest in society. The poorest are also typically marginalized from society and have little representation or voice in public and political debates, making it even harder to escape poverty.
By contrast, the wealthier you are, the more likely you are to benefit from economic or political policies. The amount the world spends on military, financial bailouts and other areas that benefit the wealthy, compared to the amount spent to address the daily crisis of poverty and related problems are often staggering.
Many feel that high levels of inequality will affect social cohesion and lead to problems such as increasing crime and violence.
Inequality is often a measure of relative poverty. Absolute poverty, however, is also a concern. World Bank figures for world poverty reveals a higher number of people live in poverty than previously thought.
For example, the new poverty line is defined as living on the equivalent of $1.25 a day. With that measure based on latest data available (2005), 1.4 billion people live on or below that line.
Around 21,000 children die every day around the world.
That is equivalent to:
  • 1 child dying every 4 seconds
  • 14 children dying every minute
  • A 2011 Libya conflict-scale death toll every day
  • A 2010 Haiti earthquake occurring every 10 days
  • A 2004 Asian Tsunami occurring every 11 days
  • An Iraq-scale death toll every 19–46 days
  • Just under 7.6 million children dying every year
  • Some 92 million children dying between 2000 and 2010
The silent killers are poverty, easily preventable diseases and illnesses, and other related causes. Despite the scale of this daily/ongoing catastrophe, it rarely manages to achieve, much less sustain, prime-time, headline coverage.
We often hear leaders from rich countries telling poor countries that aid and loans will only be given when they show they are stamping out corruption.
While that definitely needs to happen, the rich countries themselves are often active in the largest forms of corruption in those poor countries, and many economic policies they prescribe have exacerbated the problem.
Corruption in developing countries definitely must be high on the priority lists (and is increasingly becoming so in the wake of the global financial crisis), but so too must it be on the priority lists of rich countries.

What are the biggest global challenges?


Whether it’s turning promises on climate change into action, rebuilding trust in the financial system, or connecting the world to the INTERNET, the World Economic Forum has singled out 10 key global challenges that, if they are to be addressed, require cooperation from the public and private sectors.
Here is a guide to the 10 challenges, and why they matter to the world.

Food security and why it matters

By 2050, the world must feed 9 billion people. Yet the demand for food will be 60% greater than it is today.

















The United Nations has set ending hunger, achieving food security and improved nutrition, and promoting sustainable agriculture as the second of its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the year 2030.
To achieve these objectives we will need to address a host of issues, from gender parity and ageing populations to skills development and global warming.
Agriculture sectors will have to become more productive by adopting efficient business models and forging public-private partnerships. And they need to become sustainable by reducing greenhouse gas emissions, water use and waste.
Why should growth be inclusive?

The push for economic growth in recent decades has led to substantial increases in wealth for large numbers of people across the globe. But despite huge gains in global economic output, there is evidence that our current social, political and economic systems are exacerbating inequalities, rather than reducing them.














A growing body of research also suggests that rising income inequality is the cause of economic and social ills, ranging from low consumption to social and political unrest, and is damaging to our future economic well-being.
In order to boost growth and counter the slowdown in emerging markets, we need to step up efforts around the world to accelerate economic activity and to ensure that its benefits reach everybody in society.

What will the world of work look like?
Nearly 500 million new jobs will need to be created by 2020 to provide opportunities to those currently unemployed and to the young people who are projected to join the workforce over the next few years.
At the same time, many industries are facing difficulty hiring qualified staff. One 2015 survey found that, globally, 38% of all employers are reporting difficulty filling jobs, a two-percentage point rise from 2014.
Put simply, we need jobs for the hundreds of millions of unemployed people around the world, and we need the skilled employees that businesses are struggling to find.

Climate change: can we turn words into action?
The Earth’s average land temperature has warmed nearly 1°C in the past 50 years as a result of human activity, global greenhouse gas emissions have grown by nearly 80% since 1970, and atmospheric concentrations of the major greenhouse gases are at their highest level in 800,000 years

































We're already seeing and feeling the impacts of climate change with weather events such as droughts and storms becoming more frequent and intense, and changing rainfall patterns. Insurers estimate that since the 1980s weather-related economic loss events have tripled.
Policy-makers have been advised by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that there is a high risk of catastrophic climate change if warming is not limited to 2°C.
The historic agreement reached in Paris in December 2015 outlines a global commitment to keep warming to 2°C and to strive to limit global temperature rise to 1.5°C.
Under the agreement, every country will implement its own climate action plan that will be reviewed in 2018 and then every five years to ratchet up ambition levels. Wealthier countries also committed to deliver significant flows of money and technical support to help poor countries cope with curbing their greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.
The world has agreed what is to be done. Now it is time for implementation.

What's the future of global finance?

The global financial crisis revealed significant weaknesses in the financial system and some of the vulnerabilities that can result from having such an interconnected global market.
Several years after the crisis, the world economy is still struggling with slow growth, unconventional monetary policy in major economies, and constrained government budgets. It is vital that we find ways of making the financial system more resilient and able to withstand shocks in the market.
The crisis also caused a significant drop in levels of public trust and confidence in financial institutions. To function efficiently, the system needs to re-establish that trust.














Providing access to credit and savings is a major challenge in the battle against global poverty – yet 2 billion people do not have access to high-quality, affordable financial services. Additionally, there are 200 million small and medium-sized enterprises worldwide that have no access to formal financial services.
The challenge is to create a resilient, accessible financial system that people trust.
Will the future be gender equal?
Achieving gender equality isn't just a moral issue – it makes economic sense. Equality between men and women in all aspects of life, from access to health and education to political power and earning potential, is fundamental to whether and how societies thrive.
Although we are getting closer to gender parity, change isn't happening fast enough. For the past decade, the World Economic Forum been measuring the pace of change through the Global Gender Gap Report, and at current rates, it would take the world another 118 years – or until 2133 – to close the economic gap entirely.
There has been a significant increase in awareness of the importance of gender parity and much has been done by international organizations, civil society, governments and business.
However, often the work centres on single-issue awareness-raising campaigns. Existing work also frequently involves either cooperation between different public bodies or different private bodies.
More needs to be done to bridge the gap and facilitate cooperation between the public and private sectors.

Trump and the Crisis of Democracy



ROME, Jan 25 (IPS) - George W. Bush, the Republican bridge between Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump as U.S. president, declared that the United States was the only democracy in the world. The election of Trump now makes this traditional American rhetoric impossible. Trump received 3 million votes less than his opponent Hilary Clinton ....
Roberto Savio The American electoral system was born with independence from Britain, more than 200 years ago. These two centuries of union have formed a people united by myths, consumption and patriotism, but the constitution is untouchable, and based on the idea of protecting small states. The result is a democratic aberration.
Each state is entitled to two senators – both Wyoming with 635,000 inhabitants and California with 39 million. The nine most populous states of the Union are home to just over 50 percent of the total population. The 25 least populated states house less than one-sixth. California has more inhabitants than 21 of the least populated states. But in the Senate, just 26 of the Union's 50 states with slightly over 15 people of the American people have the majority vote.
The same happens with the election of the President. The vote of the citizens elects representatives not calibrated according to voters but to states, which elect the President. Trump was basically elected with the votes of the inhabitants of rural areas and declining industrial areas, representing the country's numerical minority.
According to all constitutionalists, a democracy is based on the balance among the legislative, executive and judicial branches. This balance has ceased to exist since the time of Ronald Reagan. In a country where only 50 percent of people vote, political polarisation has led to a structural conflict between the legislative and the executive branches of the system.
The Supreme Court, which is supposed to defend the rights of citizens, has become a political arm of the President who appoints the judges. With a Republican majority, it sanctioned the victory of George W. Bush – not Al Gore – in the presidential elections of 2000, bypassing the popular will. And in 2010 it decided that companies have the same rights as citizens and can therefore finance election campaigns, just like citizens.
As a result, the Koch brothers, lords of fossil fuel, can vote individually as citizens but contribute 900 million dollars to conservative Republican candidates. A presidential election costs at least two billion dollars. And a senatorial election 40 million. These are figures that marginalize the ordinary citizen. Do we not then have an oligarchy rather than a democracy? Basically, democracy ceases to be real if citizens no longer believe in the political system. And this is not just the American way, but also that of Europe.
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, with the end of ideologies, politics has lost vision and long-range strategy, to become a basically administrative fact, with a substantive increase in corruption. Citizens, and especially young people, do not feel part of the system. From being participatory mechanisms, political parties have become self-referential.
And to political disaffection, we should add the discovery that the neo-liberal economic model of the free market has in no way led to the growth announced for all, but has instead increased to an unprecedented extent the gap between the rich (increasingly fewer) and the poor (increasingly more numerous).
Today, just eight people possess wealth equivalent to 2.3 billion of the poorest inhabitants of the planet ... Since the crisis of 2008, at least four trillion dollars have been invested in the global financial system. In Italy, the state is investing 20 billion euros in the rescue of the Monte dei Paschi di Siena bank, a sum that would solve the problems of the country's education and health sectors. Banks meanwhile have paid 220 billion in fines for illegal activities. Not a single banker has been sent to prison, neither in Europe nor in the United States. And salaries can easily exceed a million dollars ... This disastrous ethical, political and social framework is compounded by mass immigration which, it should be recalled, is the result in large part of US and European military interventions in Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen.
That's why, as Pope Francis eloquently says, people are looking for a saviour.
The crisis of 2008, born in the United States from the fiasco of junk mortgages, and then transferred to Europe through speculation on state securities, gave rise to saviours in almost all European countries, a process which was crowned with Brexit. Now they're on the attack.
Heartened by the victory of Trump, a meeting was held in Koblenz, Germany, on January 21 of right-wing xenophobic and populist candidates at the next Dutch, French and German elections, who have formed the Europe of Nations and Freedom Group in the European Parliament. Present for Italy was Matteo Salvini who is calling for Italian elections in June, and who declares that the three founding countries of Europe – France, Italy and Germany – will soon shatter the Chain of the European Union and refound the Europe of Nations.
It is interesting to note that all look to Vladimir Putin as a point of reference, the call for a conservative and traditional church, the defence of family values against recognition of the rights of homosexuals, and the call for national values. And the impact on politics is important.
In Italy, Trump's predecessor Silvio Berlusconi says we must no longer speak of parties, which have become unpopular, but of movements. And Beppe Grillo of Italy's 5-Star Movement, who today would win the Italian elections, has declared that Trump and Putin are a heritage for humanity. As background to this Western context, we have a China, a Japan and an India ruled by nationalists. And a Philippines with a president elected on the promise to kill 60,000 people, victims of drugs. And a Latin America undergoing a profound political crisis, evident in a different way from Brazil to Venezuela, from Colombia to Bolivia, from Ecuador to Central America. And an Africa, with a population that will increase from a population of one billion to two billion in just three decades, which continues to have frequent democratic crises and inadequate responses to the economic and social needs of the continent. But the real news is that the Anglophonic world has decided to abdicate its historic role in favour of democracy and multilateralism. It should be recognised that we have so far lived in a very Anglophonic world. Until the First World War, the world lived under Pax Britannica, which had colonised 25 percent of the planet. And after that, we had almost a century of Pax Americana. The creation of the United Nations and international institutions, the concepts of gender equality, action against climate change, as well as neo-liberal globalisation, all came mainly from the Anglophonic world.
In just a few months, the Brexit vote has taken Britain back in time, and the United States under Trump is moving from a global policy to one with a purely national dimension. All this is taking place in a multi-polar world, where China can now find unforeseen opportunities, like the other emerging countries so far framed in a world order governed by the United States and its European allies.
But now, suddenly, the United States is actively engaged in destabilising traditional allies. It should be noted that Trump's strategist Stephen Bannon has said that part of his task at the White House is to strengthen European xenophobic parties and movements, and he cites Nigel Farage, the architect of Brexit, as the European model to work with. Trump's statements against the European Union, NATO, the United Nations and international agreements are known. The Trump Revolution will not be easy, and will hopefully create a mobilisation in defence of the values through which we have had 70 years of international cooperation. The development of greed – and replacement of the person as the centre of society by the market – has certainly emptied the world order of its idealistic content.
But what will this new world order be, based on nationalism, fear and greed? What is certain is that a style of governing that belies the data of reality foments tension and hatred as political tools , fights against culture, intellectuals, the press, women, minorities, homosexuals and neighbors, and will have a profoundly negative impact on politics and society, ethics and democracy, in the world.
So, the real question is: will Trump have one term, or two? If his electorate, which is basically localist, and thus ignorant of the world, does not understand that it has been used by Trump and so re-elects him, we will certainly enter an era of tension and fear, clashes and conflicts, in which it will not be pleasant to live. And we will see what happens in Europe and the rest of the world without international cooperation, which leads to peace and development ....
© Inter Press Service (2017) — All Rights Reserved

The US War on Muslim Refugees

Salil Shetty is Secretary General of Amnesty International






The gloves are off. With today’s Executive Order on “Protecting the Nation from Terrorist Attacks by Foreign Nationals,” President Donald J. Trump has declared war on Muslim refugees around the world.
With the stroke of a pen, the President has – among other actions – banned Syrian refugees from the USA and has also effectively prevented anyone (including refugees) from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the USA. These seven countries have two main things in common: they are predominantly Muslim, and they are the countries from where the majority of people seeking asylum from serious human rights violations like persecution or torture are trying to escape.
Were it not so disturbing and dangerous, this Executive Order would be pathetic in its absurdity.
It is ludicrous because there is no data to support the view that refugees – Muslim or otherwise – pose more risk of committing acts of terrorism than citizens. A refugee is not a person who commits acts of terrorism. It is someone fleeing people who commit acts of terrorism. Under international law, perpetrators of these crimes are automatically disqualified from refugee status. Additionally, the US Refugee Admissions Program puts refugees through the most rigorous and detailed security screenings of any category of persons – immigrant or visitor – to enter the USA.
The Executive Order is preposterous in its irrationality. But no one should be laughing about it.
This is a deeply frightening document. Faced with a global emergency in which 21 million people have been forced to flee their homes, one of the wealthiest and most powerful countries on earth responds by obliterating one of their only avenues for hope: “resettlement.” This is a process whereby vulnerable people (such as survivors of torture, or women and girls at risk) trapped in dire circumstances in countries like Lebanon, Jordan, Kenya, and Pakistan, are allowed to move to a country such as the USA. In sum, this Executive Order abandons host countries and punishes the most vulnerable among an already vulnerable group.
Does the Executive Order explicitly ban Muslim refugees? No. But the anti-Muslim rationale is brazen. All the countries subject to these severe restrictions are predominantly Muslim. With this action, President Trump has sent a clear message that the USA needs to be protected from Muslim people, and that they are inherently dangerous.
Also, the text identifies one of the exceptions to the new restrictions as people with religious persecution claims, but only if they are part of a religious minority. A plain reading of this provision is that the Trump administration will resettle Christians fleeing predominantly Muslim countries. This provision cloaks religious discrimination in the language of religious persecution. It is even conceivable that this favored treatment could accentuate a risk to Christian minorities in some countries where they face discrimination and violence on grounds of allegedly belonging to a foreign or American religion.
All in all, this Executive Order would function admirably as a recruitment tool for armed groups such as the Islamic State – groups keen to show that countries like the USA are inherently hostile to Muslim people.
Make no mistake: people will lose their lives because of this Executive Order. Countries hosting large numbers of refugees, feeling aggrieved and abandoned by the international community, will begin or increase their forcible expulsions of refugees. Vulnerable women, men and children who would otherwise be able to move to the USA, and who are trapped in unbearable situations, will “choose” to return home to a risk of torture or death.
It is important to remind ourselves who these people are. In 2016, 72% of the refugees resettled to the US were women and children. In my view, the term “refugee” doesn't do justice to the people who have braved deadly seas, deserts, and human-caused dangers, in the hopes of restarting their lives in peace. I have had the privilege of meeting some of these people, and have always been humbled by their resilience in the face of almost unimaginable adversity. Any country, including the US, would benefit from welcoming them.
Your gloves may be off, Mr. President. But – in solidarity with the 21 million refugees in the world today, and the countless people and organizations who work alongside and for people seeking protection – so are ours.

Monday, 28 November 2016

There Is Another Sky



There is another sky,
Ever serene and fair,
And there is another sunshine,
Though it be darkness there;
Never mind faded forests, Austin,
Never mind silent fields -
Here is a little forest,
Whose leaf is ever green;
Here is a brighter garden,
Where not a frost has been;
In its unfading flowers
I hear the bright bee hum:
Prithee, my brother,
Into my garden come!

Vision

#روس نے گرم پانی تک پہنچنے کے لئے 80 بلین ڈالر خرچ کئے
جبکہ #چائنہ نے 51 بلین ڈالر
لیکن روس نے #Destruction کا راستہ چنا اور چائنا نے #Construction کا
روس افغانستان کی سڑکیں اور انفراسٹرکچر تباہ کرتا ہوا پاراچنار کی چوٹیوں تک آیا اور نامراد لوٹا۔
جبکہ چائنا شمالی علاقہ جات اور بلوچستان کی سڑکیں تعمیر کرتا ہوا گوادر پہنچا۔۔
روس نے #پاکستان کے تعلیمی اداروں میں سرخ انقلاب، سوشلسٹ تبدیلی اور کمیونسٹ نظریہ کے لئے طلبہ کو اکسائے رکھا اور یہ بیچارے چی گویرا بننے کی کوشش میں تعلیم سے بھی گئے اور سماج میں بھی کسی کام کے نارہے، دو چار خام مال بن کر نکلے تو وہ "Smoking Corner" میں بیٹھے کالم لکھتے رہے۔
جبکہ چائنا نے 5 ہزار پاکستانی طلبہ و طالبات کو #اسکالر شپ پر چائنا بلوایا، اس کے علاوہ چائنا کی پرائیوٹ یونیورسٹیوں میں ہزاروں طلبہ و طالبات زیر تعلیم ہیں۔
آج پاکستان کی تمام یونیورسٹیوں میں سینکڑوں پروفیسر چائنا سے اعلیٰ تعیلم یافتہ ہیں۔
90 ہزار افغان، عرب اور پاکستانی مجاھدین سویت افغان جنگ میں شہید ہوئے
جبکہ سی پیک سے ایک لاکھ پاکستانیوں کو روزگار کے نئے مواقع میسر آئے
پندرہ ہزار روسی فوجی ہلاک ہوئے
جبکہ آج تیرہ ہزار پاکستانی فوجی (ایک نیا سیکیورٹی ڈویژن) سی پیک کی حفاظت پر مامور ہے
روس کے تین سو ہیلی کاپٹر، سو جنگی جہاز اور ڈیڑھ سو ٹینک لوہے کا اسکریپ بن گئے
جبکہ چائنا نے جو راستہ چنا اس کی بدولت
چائنا کے چار سو بحری جہاز ہر سال گوادر سے یورپ، افریقہ، وسطی ایشیاء اور خلیج میں جائنگے
آج چائنا دنیا کی سب بڑی سافٹ پاور ہے جس کی بدولت وہ کوئی ملک طاقت کی بنیاد پر فتح کرنا تو دور کی بات، ایک گولی چلائے بغیر ہی سپر پاور بننے جارہاہے، چائنا کی یہ طے شدہ پالیسی ہے کہ 2025 تک دنیا کے کسی رفڑے، پنگے اور دنگل کا حصہ نہیں بنے گا۔
آج دنیا کے 30 ممالک کے ٹاپ بیوروکریٹ، سفارتکار اور اعلیٰ حکومتی نمائندے چائنا سے اعلیٰ تعلیم یافتہ ہیں، جو عالمی فورمز پر اپنے ملک کے بعد سب سے زیادہ حمایت چائنہ کی کرتے ہیں، اور عالمی سیاست میں چائنہ کی یہ کامیابی اس کی اقتصادی کامیابی سے زیادہ اہمیت کی حامل ہے۔۔۔۔۔۔۔
اس سب کی وجہ یہ ہے کہ ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔
1988 میں جوزف نائے ( Joseph Nye ) نے کہا تھا کہ
"وہ دن چلے گئے کہ گولی ماری اور پہاڑ پر چڑھ گئے"
جوزف نے عالمی سیاست اور بین الاقوامی تعلقات کو ایک نیا موضوع دیا جس کا نام تھا سافٹ پاور ( Soft Power ).
اس کے مطابق وہ دور ختم ہوگیا کہ جب آپ بارود سے بھرے ٹینک لیکر کسی ملک کی سرحد پر پہنچیں گے، آپ کی فوج صف آراء ہوگی اور دھاڑتی ہوئی یلغار لائن کو عبور کرے گی اور ملک فتح ہوجائے گا۔۔
اب صرف آپ کا گولہ بارود اور طاقتور فوجیں نہیں بلکہ آپ کی مضبوط #معیشیت، #خارجہ پالیسی، #ڈپلومیسی کے طریقے، #یونیوسٹیاں، #کھیل کے میدان اور #ثقافت کے ادارے دوسرے ممالک کو متاثر کریں گے اور ان پر اثر انداز ہونگے۔ ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔
عالمی سیاست کے بدلتے ہوا رجحانات Hard Power سے Soft Power کو منتقل ہوگئے ہیں۔۔۔
اب کامیابی اور ناکامی کا فیصلہ
جنگی جہاز کی گھن گھرج
ٹینک کا بارود
میگزین میں گولیوں
اور
ہارڈ پاور کے جبری طریقوں سے نہیں
بلکہ سافٹ پاور کے ترغیبی اندازسے ہوگا۔ ۔ ۔ ۔ ۔
بے ربط خیالات~
پس تحریر
چائنہ کے بعد ابھرتی ہوئی سافٹ پاور تُرکی، کینیڈا اور بھارت ہیں۔۔ مودی کے بھارت میں آںے سے اس کا گراف نیچے ہوا ہے اور اسی طرح ڈونلڈ ٹرمپ کی وجہ سے امریکہ کا گراف مزید نیچے آئے گا۔
اسے کہتے ہین #vision

Friday, 25 November 2016

Inspector Inland Revenue Test Preparation




Part-I English =20 Marks
Consult with some good book of English like English Grammar by   Wren and Martin OR English Grammar by Raymond Murphy (Both are available on the internet in soft copies, free of cost) . Build vocabulary to gain Maximum.

Part-II Professional Test = 80 marks

 Functions of Federal Board of Revenue.
Visit this Link and Learn About FBR thoroughly.
http://www.fbr.gov.pk/OfficeHomePage.aspx?view=Office%20Home%20Page&ActionID=1&ArticleID=895#

 Fiscal Policy of Pakistan
Please Download & Read the following Topics given in the link:
Fiscal Development
Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Act, 2005
http://www.finance.gov.pk/survey_1516.html
http://www.finance.gov.pk/publications_latest.html

 Tax Administration/Reforms
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B46X-ONMuTmLVzBVSGg0WU5DbWs/view
 Sales Tax Act 1990 as amended upto July 2016
http://www.fbr.gov.pk/ShowDocument.aspx?Actionid=14736
 Federal Excise Act 2005 as amended upto July 2016
http://www.fbr.gov.pk/ShowDocument.aspx?Actionid=14737
 Income Tax Ordinance 2001 as amended upto June 2016 (Chapter-III & Part IV of Chapter-X only)
http://www.fbr.gov.pk/ShowDocument.aspx?Actionid=14630