The Hindu Editorial : March 7, 2019
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The Hindu Editorial : March 7, 2019
Dear Banking Aspirants,
THE HINDU EDITORIAL – March 7, 2018, is one of the must-read section for the competitive exams like NIACL AO Prelims Exam, IBPS SO Mains Exam. These topics are widely expected to be asked in the reading comprehension, Cloze Test or Error Detection in the forthcoming exams. So gear up your Exam preparation and learn new words daily.
a) Back to life: on the belated acquittal of death row convicts
Belated acquittal of death row convicts highlights the need to junk the death penalty
It is a tale of Kafkaesque horror. Six members of a nomadic tribe spent 16 years in prison in Maharashtra; three of them were on death row for 13 of these years, while the other three faced the gallows for nearly a decade. One of them was a juvenile at the time of the offence. And all this for a crime they did not commit. The only silver lining for the six convicts is that even though 10 years had elapsed since the Supreme Court imposed the death penalty on them, the sentence was not carried out. Hearing on their review petitions became an occasion for another Bench of the Supreme Court to revisit the 2009 verdict. A three-judge Bench has now found that unreliable testimony had been used to convict the six men. One of the two eyewitnesses had identified four others from police files as members of the gang that had raided their hut in 2003, but these four were not apprehended. The gang had stolen ₹3,000 and some ornaments, killed five members of the family, including a 15-year-old girl, who was also raped. It is possible that the heinous nature of the crime had influenced the outcome of the case. The belief that condign punishment is necessary for rendering complete justice could be behind courts brushing aside discrepancies or improvements in the evidence provided by witnesses. On a fresh hearing of the appeals, the court has concluded that the accused, who were roped in as accused in this case after being found to be involved in an unrelated crime elsewhere, were innocent.
The case, in itself, holds a strong argument against the retention of the death penalty on the statute book. Had the sentence against these six been carried out, the truth would have been buried with them. In recent years, the Supreme Court has been limiting the scope for resorting to the death penalty by a series of judgments that recognise the rights of death row convicts. A few years ago it ruled that review petitions in cases of death sentence should be heard in open court. In a country notorious for “the law’s delay”, it is inevitable that the long wait on death row, either for a review hearing or for the disposal of a mercy petition, could ultimately redound to the benefit of the convicts and their death sentences altered to life terms. In a system that many say favours the affluent and the influential, the likelihood of institutional bias against the socially and economically weak is quite high. Also, there is a perception that the way the “rarest of rare cases” norm is applied by various courts is arbitrary and inconsistent. The clamour for justice often becomes a call for the maximum sentence. In that sense, every death sentence throws up a moral dilemma on whether the truth has been sufficiently established. The only way out of this is the abolition of the death penalty altogether.
b) Wiggle space: on SEBI’s new rules
SEBI’s new rules to protect those investing in liquid mutual funds are not tight enough
According to new regulations issued by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), liquid mutual funds holding debt securities with a maturity term of more than 30 days will have to value these securities on a mark-to-market basis. Until now, liquid mutual funds could report the value of debt instruments with a maturity term of up to 60 days using the amortisation-based valuation method. Only debt securities with a maturity term of over 60 days were to be valued on a mark-to-market basis. So the new rule seemingly narrows the scope for amortisation-based valuation. Amortisation-based valuation, which is completely detached from the market price of the securities being valued, allowed mutual funds to avoid the volatility associated with mark-to-market valuation. SEBI’s new rules come in the midst of the crisis in Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) that led to various fund managers reporting the value of the same debt instruments issued by the infrastructure lender at vastly different levels. The chief financial markets regulator believes that mandating mutual funds to report the value of a greater share of their holdings on a mark-to-market basis can lead to a better and more objective valuation of these securities.
By exempting securities with a maturity period of up to 30 days from mark-to-market valuation, however, SEBI may be doing no favour to individual investors. This is because the new SEBI rule gives a strong incentive for liquid mutual funds to invest more of their funds under management in securities with a maturity period of fewer than 30 days; this helps avoid the volatility of mark-to-market accounting and the need to provide a fair account of the value of their investments. What is likely is a decrease in the yields received on securities maturing in 30 days or less and an increase in the yields on debt instruments with a maturity period of 31 to 60 days. It will, however, do nothing to make investors in mutual funds become more informed about the real value of their investments. The latest SEBI rules are also in direct contrast to the usual accounting practices when it comes to the valuation of securities. Generally accepted accounting principles mandate securities with the least maturity to be reported on a mark-to-market basis while allowing the amortisation-based method to be employed to value other securities with longer maturity periods. This makes sense as the profits and losses associated with securities with shorter terms are closer to being realised by investors when compared to longer-term securities. SEBI would do well to mandate that all investments made by liquid mutual funds should be valued on a mark-to-market basis. Simultaneously, it should work on deepening liquidity in the bond market so that bond market prices can serve as a ready reference to ascertain the value of various debt securities.
VOCABULARY
1) gallows
Meaning : a structure, typically of two uprights and a crosspiece, for the hanging of criminals(n).
Synonyms : potence
Antonyms : redemption
Example : “he was saved from the gallows by a last-minute reprieve”
2) offence
Meaning : a breach of a law or rule; an illegal act(n).
Tamil Meaning : குற்றம்
Synonyms : insult
Antonyms : defence
Example : “the new offence of obtaining property by deception”
3) convicts
Meaning : a person found guilty of a criminal offence and serving a sentence of imprisonment(n).
Synonyms : captive
Antonyms : victim
Example : “two escaped convicts kidnapped them at gunpoint”
4) elapsed
Meaning : (of time) pass or go by(v).
Synonyms : expire
Antonyms : renewed
Example : “weeks elapsed before anyone was charged with the attack”
5) imposed
Meaning : force (an unwelcome decision or ruling) on someone(v).
Tamil Meaning : திணிக்கப்பட்ட
Synonyms : demand
Antonyms : disorder
Example : “the decision was theirs and was not imposed on them by others”
6) unreliable
Meaning : not able to be relied upon(adj).
Tamil Meaning : நம்பமுடியாத
Synonyms : deceptive
Antonyms : accurate
Example : “he’s lazy and unreliable”
7) apprehended
Meaning : arrest (someone) for a crime.
Synonyms : capture
Antonyms : free
Example : “a warrant was issued but he has not been apprehended”
8) heinous
Meaning : (of a person or wrongful act, especially a crime) utterly odious or wicked(adj).
Tamil Meaning : கொடிய
Synonyms : atrocious
Antonyms : delightful
Example : “a battery of heinous crimes”
9) influenced
Meaning : have an influence on(v).
Tamil Meaning : தாக்கம்
Synonyms : changed
Antonyms : kept
Example : “government regulations can influence behaviour, but often without changing underlying values and motivations”
10) discrepancies
Meaning : an illogical or surprising lack of compatibility or similarity between two or more facts(n).
Tamil Meaning : முரண்பாடுகள்
Synonyms : difference
Antonyms : accord
Example : “there’s a discrepancy between your account and his”
11) accused
Meaning : a person or group of people who are charged with or on trial for a crime(n).
Synonyms : implicated
Antonyms : acquitted
Example : “the accused was ordered to stand trial on a number of charges”
12) retention
Meaning : the continued possession, use, or control of something(n).
Tamil Meaning : வைத்திருத்தல்
Synonyms : detainment
Antonyms : freedom
Example : “the retention of direct control by central government”
13) resorting
Meaning : turn to and adopt (a course of action, especially an extreme or undesirable one) so as to resolve a difficult situation(v).
Tamil Meaning : ஈடுபடுகிறார்கள்
Synonyms : affect
Antonyms : abstain
Example : “the duke was prepared to resort to force if negotiation failed”
14) recognise
Meaning : identify (someone or something) from having encountered them before; know again(v).
Synonyms : discern
Antonyms : ignore
Example : “I recognized her when her wig fell off”
15) inevitable
Meaning : certain to happen; unavoidable(adj).
Tamil Meaning : தவிர்க்க முடியாத
Synonyms : imminent
Antonyms : avoidable
Example : “war was inevitable”
16) redound
Meaning : contribute greatly to (a person’s credit or honour)(v).
Synonyms : react
Antonyms : hinder
Example : “his latest diplomatic effort will redound to his credit”
17) disposal
Meaning : the action or process of getting rid of something(n).
Tamil Meaning : அகற்றல்
Synonyms : demolition
Antonyms : construction
Example : “the disposal of radioactive waste”
18) affluent
Meaning : (especially of a group or area) having a great deal of money; wealthy(adj).
Tamil Meaning : வசதியான
Synonyms : prosperous
Antonyms : destitute
Example : “the affluent societies of the western world”
19) perception
Meaning : the ability to see, hear, or become aware of something through the senses(n).
Tamil Meaning : கருத்து
Synonyms : attention
Antonyms : concrete
Example : “the normal limits to human perception”
20) dilemma
Meaning : a situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two or more alternatives, especially ones that are equally undesirable(n).
Tamil Meaning : குழப்பத்தில்
Synonyms : difficulty
Antonyms : solution
Example : “he wants to make money, but he also disapproves of it: Den’s dilemma in a nutshell”
21) amortisation
Meaning : the action or process of gradually writing off the initial cost of an asset(n).
Tamil Meaning : மெதுவாக நிலைமாறும்
Synonyms : snubbing
Example : “due to the amortization of initial costs, the risks of negative working capital are mitigated”
22) detached
Meaning : aloof and objective(adj).
Tamil Meaning : பிரிக்கப்பட்ட
Synonyms : removed
Antonyms : attached
Example : “he is a detached observer of his own actions”
23) vastly
Meaning : to a very great extent; immensely(adv).
Synonyms : enormously
Example : “business practices differ vastly from country to country”
24) regulator
Meaning : a person or body that supervises a particular industry or business activity.
Synonyms : manager
Example : “regulators of privatized utilities
25) exempting
Meaning : free (a person or organization) from an obligation or liability imposed on others(v).
Tamil Meaning : தளர்த்தியது
Synonyms : immune
Antonyms : hindered
Example : “they were exempted from paying the tax”
26) fewer
Meaning : a small number of.
Tamil Meaning : குறைவான
Synonyms : middling
Antonyms : important
Example : “may I ask a few questions?”
27) mandate
Meaning : an official order or commission to do something.
Tamil Meaning : ஆணை
Synonyms : command
Antonyms : breach
Example : “a mandate to seek the release of political prisoners”
28) ascertain
Meaning : find (something) out for certain; make sure of(n).
Tamil Meaning : அறிந்துகொள்ள
Synonyms : confirm
Antonyms : disprove
Example : “an attempt to ascertain the cause of the accident”
29) volatility
Meaning : liability to change rapidly and unpredictably, especially for the worse.
Tamil Meaning :
Synonyms : dryness
Example : “the succession of new rulers contributed to the volatility of the situation”
30) arbitrary
Meaning : based on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system.
Synonyms : capricious
Antonyms : consistent
Example : “an arbitrary decision”
THE HINDU EDITORIAL : MARCH 5, 2019
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