Re: [MTC Global] Fwd: ~ * How China Disciplines its citizen ~*Very interesting

Thanks Prof. Deshpandeji for an eye opening information.

The human behavior can be controlled from withing through say repentance or penance or values embodied or  by external enforcement.

Great  souls like Mahatma Gandhiji prefer the the control from within. But common man  like me, it appears to be a herculean  task.  External enforcement may be religious, ethical, moral or Government or by any other regulatory authority  has been found to be effective.

The effectiveness of regulation is dependent upon the integrity of the masters at the helms of affairs who monitor the system.

If one critically studies the Indian History of the last 1000 years  or so, India has been miserably failing in such regulations.

Regards,

Dr. P H Waghodekar, PhD (Egg), IIT,KGP, IE&M, 1985,
Advisor (HR), IBS & PME (PG)
Marathwada Institute of Technology,
NH 211, Beed by pass road,
Aurangabad: 431010 (Maharashtra) INDIA.
(O) 02402375113 (M) 7276661925
E-Mail: waghodekar@rediffmail.com
Website: www.mit.asia
and
Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.


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From: Rajendra Deshpande <gandhianthought.cug@gmail.com>
Sent: Mon, 22 May 2017 14:58:45
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Subject: [MTC Global] Fwd: ~ * How China Disciplines its citizen ~*Very interesting

Very interesting



Beijing penalizes 6.7m debtors with travel ban

YUAN YANG — BEIJING
Taking high-speed trains is prohibited under a Supreme Court move to impose limits on 'discredited' people
China has banned almost 7m people from taking flights and high-speed trains over the past four years as a penalty for not repaying their debts, the country's Supreme Court has announced.
The penalty system is part of efforts to build a nationwide "social credit" system that will eventually rate every Chinese citizen by collecting big data on financial, legal or social misdeeds. The debtors' travel ban has been touted as an important first step for building the structural links needed to implement such a comprehensive monitoring programme.
"We have signed a memorandum . . . [with over] 44 government departments in order to limit 'discredited' people on multiple levels," Meng Xiang, head of the executive department of the Supreme Court, told state media yesterday. The memorandum includes all the country's big banks as well as the national public security bureau.
Since 2013 the Supreme Court has operated a "discredited" blacklist of long-term debtors who have been ordered to repay what they owe. All 6.73m people on the list have been banned from boarding flights and high-speed trains.
The ban works by blocking personal identity card numbers, which are required for buying and checking in for flights and trains as well as staying in hotels. Anyone can search the blacklist via the Supreme Court's website by entering a full name and ID card number.
In addition to not paying debts on time, one can also be blacklisted for lying in court, hiding one's assets and a host of other crimes.
China's courts have said a social credit system is needed to rein in the country's hangover of bad debt — both personal and corporate — because the lack of a personal bankruptcy law and a comprehensive financial credit system have limited the government's capacity to enforce financial penalties.
However, critics have argued the social credit system is aimed at enforcing social control and political loyalty by tying desired outcomes such as access to bank loans or job promotions to patriotic behavior.



--
Rajendra.Deshpande..
B. Pharm. M.M.M. PGDIT.PhD ( In Process )
PhD.Fellowat Central University.
Centerfor Gandhian Thought & Peace Studies.
Mobile:+91 9326354999.WhatsAP+91 9604679693

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