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Thursday

Vietnam Stripping of its soul

by YAP MUN CHING on THE SUN DAILY

http://www.thesundaily.my/news/764803

THE air is choking and the noise incessant. Out on the streets of Saigon, one may survive the chaotic traffic but it may also be only a matter of time before the noxious fumes take their toll.

On my latest visit to the city, a little more than four years since my last and eight years since my first, Vietnam seems to have gone over something of an economic crest to end up somewhere in a trough. Although it was once assessed glowingly by fund managers and economists along with the other regional darling, Indonesia, the country seems to be going through a harsh reality check.

Double-digit inflation, rising inequality and a deeply troubled banking sector has brought the Vietnam economic miracle to a standstill, a fact admitted even by the state-controlled media. According to English language newspaper Viet Nam News, Vietnam is expected to miss this year's GDP growth target of 5.2-5.7%. With the spectre of rampant inflation looming and a domestic credit crunch, the government's hands are tied in attempting any expansionary measures. Instead, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has had to call for the State Bank of Viet Nam to restructure debts and reduce bad debts.

The effect of the heady years of the last decade can be felt most strongly here in Saigon, the de facto commercial capital of the country. On the leafy streets of District 1, once bustling shops now seem tired and jaded. Where stores on the main shopping street of Dong Khoi once did brisk business, storefronts are now either closed or taken over by large property developers to be converted into faceless shopping malls or bland office towers.

"It is very tough now. Locals are not spending and tourists are buying much less. Our export markets in Europe have also dried up so we are now only staying afloat with our stock inventory," said Duong, an entrepreneur who runs one of Vietnam's top interior furnishing stores.

To add to her difficulties, Duong has had to move her Saigon store from its prime location just off Dong Khoi, after 10 years building her business and reputation.

"The shop was sold to an owner who wants to break down 10 shops to build a hotel. We are being crowded out by big businesses with deeper pockets," she said.

The visual impact of this is that from the vantage point of the Saigon Opera House, a stone's throw from Duong's former store location, the charming skyline is now marred by glass towers and neon shopping centre lights which clash sharply with the unique architecture that so defined Vietnamese cities like Hanoi and Saigon.

In 2004, on my first visit, it appeared that Ho Chi Minh City thrived on local enterprise. Now, that spirit seems to have been replaced by a sense of desperation to get rich quick at a cost that was stripping the city of its very soul.

Some members of the Vietnamese art community believe that Vietnam's inability to get itself out of crisis mode has very much to do with this.

"The establishment is very conservative. It does not encourage creativity or independence. Even in art, the establishment believes there is only one type of Vietnamese art and everyone is supposed to abide by certain guidelines," said Dinh Le, one of Vietnam's top contemporary artist. "When you take this approach to deal with the crisis, you are in trouble. The government simply does not know what to do."

The one silver lining that the difficult times has created is the condition for more debates on how Vietnam sees its future. Long time Saigon resident, Australian Zoe Butt believes that the opening up of new media channels has enabled many more young Vietnamese to exchange views on how they want the country to go forward.

"The government's instinct is to clamp down on debate but it is so much harder to stop people from discussing these issues now," she said. "Facebook has made a huge difference."

It may be a while before Vietnam can regain its stride. As with many other developing countries, its fate is tied in with that of developed countries that are now going through their own crises. How soon and how strong the Vietnamese recovery will be depends on how the world economy picks itself up. It will also depend on whether enough time will have passed for the Vietnamese to figure out how they want to move forward.

Friday

When should we use ‘non-parametric’ techniques?

We only use parametric techniques (like t test, z test) when we are certain about the distribution of the variable of interest.

When we don’t know its distribution, it is safer to use non-parametric tests. These tests have no assumptions about distribution of the dependent variable.

In fact, it has been argued, quite sharply, that in all social sciences, we should use non-parametric, rather than parametric, tests.

Literature on adoption of innovation, sociology and anthropology of innovation

This can be a source for someone who is investigating social aspects of innovation, innovation adoption, etc.

http://www.ssrn.com/link/Sociology-Innovation.html

There is a vast literature on diffusion of innovations or adoption of innovation, here are some of them:

 

Boahene, K. (1995). Innovation adoption as a socio-economic process : the case of the Ghanaian cocoa industry. Amsterdam: Thesis Publishers.

Boahene, K., Snijders, T. A., & Folmer, H. (1999). An integrated socioeconomic analysis of innovation adoption: the case of hybrid cocoa in Ghana. Journal of Policy Modeling, 21(2), 167-184.

Boahene, K. S. T. A. B. F. H. (1999). An integrated socioeconomic analysis of innovation adoption: the case of hybrid cocoa in Ghana. Journal of Policy Modeling (New York), 21(02), 167-1874.

Dumett, R. (1971). The Rubber Trade of the Gold Coast and Asante in the Nineteenth Century: African Innovation and Market Responsiveness. The Journal of African History, 12(1), 79-101. doi: 10.2307/180568

Feder, G. (1985). Adoption of agricultural innovations in developing countries a survey. Economic Development and Cultural Change, Chicago, p. 255-298, Jan. 1985.

Kaplinsky, R. (2004). Competitions policy and the global coffee and cocoa value chains Retrieved March 13, 2013, from http://www.ids.ac.uk/FA0B8240-5056-8171-7B8943D52FF0DA62

Personal variables affecting adoption of agricultural innovations by Nigerian farmers. from http://ajol.info/index.php/sajae/article/view/3664

Pomp, M. B. K. (1995). Innovation and imitation : adoption of cocoa by Indonesian smallholders. World development., 23(3), 413-431.

Rogers, E. M. (1983). Diffusion of innovations. New York; London: Free Press ; Collier Macmillan.

Scott, J. C. (1976). The moral economy of the peasant : rebellion and subsistence in Southeast Asia. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Scott, J. C. (1998). Seeing like a state : how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Wejnert, B. (2002). Integrating models of diffusion of innovations: a conceptual framework. Annual review of sociology, 28, 297.

Reliability in qualitative analysis

Interrater reliability is the common term here. Two coders will code the same text separately and then discuss how much they agree with each other.

If such practice is impossible, the writer/researcher can make a brief report and ask interviewees to comment on it. Alternatively, the researcher can organize a workshop to present initial findings and ask invited interviewees to tell how much the initial findings reflect their stories.

This practice helps to reduce the possibility that researcher imposes his own ‘theoretical frame’ on the data and miss important ‘emic’ perspectives.

What is rural, rural frontier? What to do with rural health?

 

This site answers those questions. Though it is run by the government, it’s still a good source on rural health that I have happened to know.

http://www.nal.usda.gov/ric/ricpubs/what_is_rural.shtml

A serious discussion of ‘rural’ has never been seen in the universities where I worked and studied. Yet, the term ‘rural’ has been used widely and wildly. It is time to think about the concept ‘rural’ seriously.

Sunday

Vietocr

This website is useful for recognizing Vietnamese fonts from documents that could not be read by normal applications

http://vietocr.sourceforge.net/

Sa đà vào quyền lực và danh vọng

Có một sự khác biệt rất nhỏ giữa làm việc vì quyền lực và danh vọng, và làm việc để cống hiến. Khi chúng ta bắt đầu bằng số không, chúng ta ít nghĩ tới quyền lực và danh vọng mà chỉ muốn duy trì một công việc nào đó. Chúng ta cống hiến cho nơi mà chúng ta làm. Khi chúng ta đã có nhiều thứ để bảo vệ, chúng ta nghĩ nhiều hơn tới quyền lực và danh vọng. Đơn giản là vì chúng đem đến cho chúng ta của cải, những mối quan hệ tốt đẹp, và nhiều của cải hơn. Những thứ này ngày càng khiến chúng ta đắm đuối. Chúng ta trở nên yêu mình hơn và khó chịu với những người đang cạnh tranh hoặc có khả năng cạnh tranh quyền lực và danh vọng với mình. Động cơ cống hiến cho xã hội của chúng ta cứ phai nhạt dần vì chúng ta đã thực sự chỉ nghĩ đến việc bảo vệ lợi ích của bản thân, và có thể là của gia đình mình. Đôi khi, chúng ta sẽ tự trấn an mình bẳng cách nói rằng ‘mình thỉnh thoảng vẫn làm từ thiện đấy chứ’. Nhưng kỳ thực, chúng ta đang sa ngã vào những đam mê quyền lực và danh vọng.

Người lãnh đạo tốt là người loại trừ được những đam mê ấy khỏi bàn làm việc của mình. Cần phải sẵn sàng hy sinh vị trí của mình khi thấy mình không còn cần thiết nữa. 

Friday

Scale or Index?

 

1 - Scale: a class of quantitative data measures often used in survey research that captures the intensity, direction, level or potency of a variable construct along a continuum; most are at the ordinal level of measurement

2 - Index: The summing or combining of many separate measures of a construct or variable to create a single score

Principles of good measurement

 

1 – Mutually exclusive attributes: every response is clearly different from others

2 – Exhaustive attribute: every response has a place to go

3 – Uni-dimensionality : only one construct is measured