Abhisek Mukherjee: “[India] will soon have the largest pool of management consultants in the world. Their training is highly valued, and their talents are sought-after. These are the professionals who will drive India’s growth as corporate leaders, startup founders and fund managers. Many of them will leverage their training and relationships to start their consulting firms, which will drive a wave of offshoring of consulting services to India. The influence of this soft power will be massive, perhaps even more than the influence of Indian IT globally. This will also drive down the rates of consulting services, which will make it accessible to a larger pool of clients, not just in the traditional markets but also in emerging economies in Asia and Africa. The resulting virtuous cycle for India-bred global management consulting firms will help attract both clients and capital. Like IT, management consulting in India is commoditizing. This is great for India and the world.”
David Brooks about the US: “Liberalism is a way of life built on respect for the dignity of each individual. A liberal order, John Stuart Mill suggested, is one in which people are free to conduct “experiments in living” so you wind up with “a large variety in types of character.” There’s no one best way to live, so liberals celebrate freedom, personal growth and diversity. Many of America’s founders were fervent believers in liberal democracy — up to a point. They had a profound respect for individual virtue, but also individual frailty. Samuel Adams said, “Ambitions and lust for power … are predominant passions in the breasts of most men.” Patrick Henry admitted to feelings of dread when he contemplated the “depravity of human nature.” One delegate to the constitutional convention said that the people “lack information and are constantly liable to be misled.” Our founders were aware that majorities are easily led by ambitious demagogues. So our founders built a system that respected popular opinion and majority rule while trying to build guardrails to check popular passion and prejudice.”
David Reisman on the key ideas of James Buchanan: “In summary, it is like this. The good society must be built up from the revealed preferences of unique individuals who feel a need to register their choices. God has been dead for a century. Truth is tested by agreement. Efficiency is tested by agreement. Justice is consensus. Fairness is the rational calculus of the loss-averting one-off when situated behind a thick veil of fog. Entrepreneurial imagination weaves unanticipated skeins out of uncertain unknowables. The market is a disequilibrium process of exploration and discovery. Procedures alone and never endstates may be said to be economic. Social interaction is collective choice. Unanimity is the sole test of optimality. Utility like opportunity cost is all in the mind. Human nature is nasty and brutish. Anarchy is the jungle. Leviathan is the Gulag. In between there are the rules. Formal and informal constitutions ensure that the rational and the self-seeking will strike bargains and not one another. Politicians and bureaucrats, neither omniscient nor beneficent, are as short-horizoned as any other merchants. Choices in the public sector are made not by the State qua State but by individuals qua individuals. Politics must be constrained by multi-period rules lest the nasty and the brutish bribe their voters with quantitative easing and deficit finance.” [via Atanu Dey]

