 Well, it's a wonderful opportunity for me to greet President Matsuyate Sari, who is very privileged to have known and has as a friend and who's influencing the building up of WIDER right from the early days when I was involved with WIDER, has been extraordinarily important, inspiring, and deeply influential. Of course, President Matsuyate Sari's role in the world is widely known and very deeply admired, but in a small way that applied even to WIDER, which was a new institution, new kind of a place where research would be done as the name indicated or an acronym WIDER. It was trying to take a wider, a broader, a more inclusive view of the world and the pursuit of development studies has to be done. It was determined at that time on a much broader basis than was indeed conventional. And in that part was enormously important, part was played by Matsuyate Sari as one of the principal advisors and influences in the early days of WIDER. And in particular, some of his concern, including the one which you will be talking about today, I understand, namely the importance of equity and the issues of fairness in the process of the development of the world and in that context both peace and prosperity. Really among the major issues we tried to deal with, there is sometimes a kind of artificial barrier raising, you know, economic expansion is one thing, but equity is yet another. That's not the right way of thinking about it, one thing, you don't get much economic expansion if you are troubled with problems of inequality within as well as discontent which often can come when some people's lives are not going well at all despite other people's life rolling forward. Now President Atisari had been very concerned with these issues for a very long time and I remember wonderful discussions with him and actually with his wife, Eva, also on these subjects when we were trying to look for a vision for WIDER. And I think that question really ends alive today. I was just thinking about it because I've published recently a book on India and one of the issues is that the high rate of economic growth of India has not translated into the bettering of the lives of the bulk of the population. And in some ways the concern is not just to view it artificially separate and namely you have the growth and however you can then make people's lives better. But people's lives better is part of the engagement of which growth is also a byproduct. As I think Adam Smith noted well over 200 years ago that there's nothing as important as having a healthy educated workforce who can cultivate their skill, who can improve on their skill and who have a sense of satisfaction in their lives in the community including he discussed particularly such issues as appearing in public without shame, participating in public discussion. But these have been among the central concern of the entire United Nations effort of which of course Mati Atissari has been a central figure in recent years, decades actually. And I think these issues remain in the context of India at the moment that people are talking about how does the growth rate have come out to be, how is it not sustaining itself? Well, there are all kinds of problems and people point to the failure to deal with the physical infrastructure but there are similar issues of the social infrastructure too that is the potholes on the road are very easy to see but potholes in our health care and education system are not so easy to detect. So I think the entire approach that beginning with director Lal Javada who is the first director of WIDA and many of us who were trying to advise him I think of other advisors like Steve Maglin and others and also a lot of the people working in WIDA at that time like Esa Arosmani, we were very concerned about how make equity, make equity a part of the picture, not a detachable whole to the story of human progress. To see that human progress has to be understood in terms of what it does to the lives of the people, the well-being and freedom of the people and to understand how the well-being and the freedom of the people feedback in making growth sustainable not just environmentally that too is very important but also sustainable socially. And my one deep regret is that I can't be there today and listen to Matiasari speaking again I've had that pleasurable experience many times I feel very deprived that I won't be able to have that pleasure now but I take this opportunity of wishing everyone a wonderful time and I minimally demand a full report as to what happens today.