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India's economy added $1 trillion under Modi but not the millions of jobs it needs

Congress Leader Rahul Gandhi Slams Government For Rise In Fuel Prices

Rahul Gandhi's remarks came as petrol prices in several cities crossed ₹ 100 and were nearing the mark in Delhi

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Monday hit out at the government over the rise in petrol prices, and said the waves of tax collection epidemic are continuously coming.
His remarks came as petrol prices in several cities crossed ₹ 100 and were nearing the mark in Delhi.

"The process of unlocking has started in many states. While paying the bill at the petrol pump, you will see the rise in inflation by the Modi government. The waves of tax collection epidemic are continuously coming," Mr Gandhi said in a tweet in Hindi.

Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala also termed the rise in petrol prices as an "excessive public loot" and said the Modi government is responsible for it.

"Excessive public loot - in the last 13 months, petrol and diesel have risen by ₹ 25.72 and ₹ 23.93 per litre.

"In some states, petrol has crossed ₹ 100 per litre. The increase in taxes by the Modi government and not high crude oil price is responsible for this rise in petrol and diesel prices," he said on Twitter.

The Congress has been critical of the government for rising prices of petrol and diesel.

The opposition party has also been demanding that petrol and diesel be brought under the purview of the GST regime.


https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/congress-leader-rahul-gandhi-slams-government-for-rise-in-fuel-prices-2458075
 
See the hypocrisy of hypocrites!

In last 7 years,

Excise duty on petrol has been raised by 4 times,
Excise duty on diesel has been raised by 10 times!

Shows you the perils of opting for 'hard work' over Harvard!
 
See the hypocrisy of hypocrites!

In last 7 years,

Excise duty on petrol has been raised by 4 times,
Excise duty on diesel has been raised by 10 times!

Shows you the perils of opting for 'hard work' over Harvard!

what are the prices for fuel in India
 
India adaptable and agile even in middle of pandemic: PM Modi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi invited the world to invest in the country as he said "India offers what innovators and investors need."


Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said India as a nation is adaptable and agile while commending the startups and the private sector in its fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

"We in India implemented huge reforms across sectors, be it mining, space, banking, atomic energy and more. This goes on to show that India as a nation is adaptable and agile, even in the middle of the pandemic," the Prime Minister said at the fifth edition of VivaTech on Wednesday.

The Prime Minister invited the world to invest in the country as he said "India offers what innovators and investors need." Modi invited the world to invest in India based on five pillars of talent, market, capital, ecosystem and culture of openness.

Speaking of the digital expansion in India, the PM said this expansion is being powered by state-of-the-art public digital infrastructure. Around 523,000km of fiber optic network already links our 156,000 villages and many more are being connected in the times to come, Modi said.

"Today India has 1.18 billion mobile phones and 75 million internet users. This is more than the population of several nations. Data consumption in India is among the highest and the cheapest in the world. Indians are the largest users of social media. There is a diverse and extensive market that awaits," Modi said.

VivaTech, one of the largest digital and startup events in Europe, is held in Paris every year since 2016. The event is jointly organised by Publicis Groupe —a prominent advertising and marketing conglomerate — and Les Echos, a leading French media group.

Prime Minister Modi during the virtual address said that the country's strides in the world of tech and startups are well known. Our nation is home to one of the world's largest startup ecosystems, PM said adding that several unicorns have also come up in recent years.

Emphasizing the significance of innovation, the Prime Minister said where convention fails, innovation helps, which, he said, has been seen during the Covid-19 pandemic, the biggest disruption of our age.

He also said that India and France have been working closely on a wide range of subjects, among which, technology and digital are emerging areas of cooperation.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/india-adaptable-and-agile-even-in-middle-of-pandemic-pm-modi-101623839785262.html
 
3 million jobs in Indian IT firms to be slashed by next year: Report

The domestic IT sector employs around 16 million, of them around 9 million are employed in low-skilled services and BPO roles, according to Nasscom. Of these 9 million low-skilled services and BPO roles, 30 per cent or around 3 million will be lost by 2022, principally driven by the impact of robot process automation or RPA.

With automation taking place at a much faster pace across industries especially in the tech space, domestic software firms that employee over 16 million are set to slash headcounts by a massive 3 million by 2022, which will help them save a whopping USD 100 billion mostly in salaries annually, says a report.

The domestic IT sector employs around 16 million, of them around 9 million are employed in low-skilled services and BPO roles, according to Nasscom. Of these 9 million low-skilled services and BPO roles, 30 per cent or around 3 million will be lost by 2022, principally driven by the impact of robot process automation or RPA.

Roughly 0.7 million roles are expected to be replaced by RPA alone and the rest due to other technological upgrades and upskilling by the domestic IT players, while it the RPA will have the worst impact in the US with a loss of almost 1 million jobs, according to a Bank of America report on Wednesday. Based on average fully-loaded employee costs of USD 25,000 per annum for India-based resources and USD 50,000 for US resources, this will release around USD 100 billion in annual salaries and associated expenses for corporates, the report says.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/business/3-million-jobs-in-indian-it-firms-to-be-slashed-by-next-year-report-101623860355782.html
 
"Such Vikas": Rahul Gandhi's Zinger Over Unprecedented Fuel Price Hike

Taking a spin on the government's "Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas (with all, development for all)" slogan, Rahul Gandhi said that the condition of "Vikas (development)" is such that if there is no increase in fuel price for a single day, that becomes a bigger news.

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi today took a dig at the Centre amid rising fuel prices in the country. Taking a spin on the government's "Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas (with all, development for all)" slogan, Mr Gandhi said that the condition of "Vikas (development)" is such that if there is no increase in fuel price for a single day, that becomes a bigger news.
"Such is the condition of Modi government's vikas (development) that if the price of petrol and diesel does not increase any day, then it becomes a bigger news!" the Congress MP said in a tweet.

Prices of petrol and diesel in Delhi stood at ₹ 96.93 per litre and ₹ 87.69 per litre respectively on Friday.

Petrol and diesel prices per litre in Bhopal stand at ₹ 104.53 and 95.75 per litre respectively and in Mumbai, ₹ 102.82 and ₹ 94.84 per litre respectively.

The state-run oil marketing companies - Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum - align the rates of domestic fuel with that of the global crude oil prices by taking into account any changes in foreign exchange rates. Any changes in fuel prices are implemented with effect from 6 am every day.

Meanwhile, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari on Wednesday said India is going to increase the production of alternative fuel ethanol as people are facing problems due to a hike in petrol and diesel prices.

Addressing a conference organised by BRICS Network University virtually, Mr Gadkari said that automobile makers are producing flex-fuel engines in Brazil, Canada and the US, providing an alternative to customers to use 100 per cent petrol or 100 per cent bio-ethanol.

"Now Indian production (of ethanol), we are going to increase because of the rise in petrol prices. People are facing a lot of problems," Mr Gadkari said while explaining that the use of ethanol is cost effective.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/rahul-gandhis-dig-over-rising-fuel-price-vikas-condition-is-such-2466884
 
The Modi government collected Rs 3.89 lakh crore in excise duty collections in 2020-21, a 62 per cent growth from Rs 2.39 lakh crore collected in 2019-20, of which a majority is estimated to be from taxes and cess on petrol.

This increase in tax collections came despite the fact that petroleum consumption contracted 9 per cent in 2020-21 due to curbs on movement on account of the Covid-19 pandemic. It can be attributed to the sharp hike in taxes levied on petroleum products in May 2020.

https://theprint.in/economy/petrol-...price-hikes-than-just-global-oil-cost/680701/
 
Fuel prices at record levels: States where petrol is over ₹100 a litre mark

Bihar is latest to join the list of 11 states and union territories where petrol price has crossed the ₹100 a litre mark. In Delhi, petrol hit an all-time high of ₹98.46 a litre, while diesel is now priced at ₹88.90 per litre.

The prices of petrol and diesel have been constantly inceasing for the past few months. While the opposition parties and commons man have been raising their voices against the relentless hike, the government has not said anything on stopping the rise or bring the price down.

Bihar is the latest to join the list of states where petrol is being soled at over ₹100. The prices have been increasing since May 4, a day after the results of the Assembly elections were announced. Before that, the oil marketing companies (OMCs) which decide the price at 6am everyday, had not increased the fuel price for 18 days.

Petrol price was hiked by 35 paise per litre and diesel by 25 paise, according to a price notification by the OMCs on Sunday. It was the second price hike in two days and 31st in the last 54 days.

Including Bihar, there are 11 states and union territories now where petrol is being sold at over ₹100 a litre in some towns. These are Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Telangana, Odisha, Manipur, Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/business/fuel-prices-at-record-levels-states-where-petrol-is-over-rs-100-a-litre-mark-101624790449242.html
 
Luxembourg has a higher GDP/Capita than India. Thus Luxembourg has a stronger economy if you want to floor the path of the delusional Hindutava keyboard warriors
 
Luxembourg has a higher GDP/Capita than India. Thus Luxembourg has a stronger economy if you want to floor the path of the delusional Hindutava keyboard warriors

luxembourg is a really well educated country, very similar to singapore, just not on a coast, nothing to be ashamed that it has a higher gdp than india / most countries
 
French Court Lets Cairn Energy Seize 20 Indian Government Assets: Report

Cairn Energy vs Government of India: An arbitration panel had in December ordered the Indian government to return USD 1.2 billion plus interest and penalty to Cairn Energy after reversing a retrospective tax demand.

In a setback to India, Britain's Cairn Energy has secured a French court order to seize some 20 government properties in Paris to recover a part of the USD 1.7 billion due from New Delhi following an arbitration panel overturning levy of retrospective taxes.
The centrally located properties mostly comprise of flats, valued at more than EUR 20 million, were used by Indian government establishment in France, three people with direct knowledge of the matter told news agency Press Trust of India.

The French court, Tribunal judiciaire de Paris, on June 11 agreed to Cairn's application to freeze (through judicial mortgages) residential real estate owned by the Government of India in central Paris, they said adding the legal formalities for the same was completed on Wednesday evening.

While Cairn is unlikely to evict the Indian officials residing in those properties, the government cannot sell them after the court order.

A three-member international arbitration tribunal that consisted of one judge appointed by India, had in December last year unanimously overturned levy of taxes on Cairn retrospectively and ordered refund of shares sold, dividend confiscated and tax refunds withheld to recover such demand.

With the Indian government refusing to honour the award, Cairn has moved in multiple overseas jurisdictions to enforce the award by seizing Indian assets.

Last month, Cairn brought a lawsuit in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York pleading that Air India is controlled by the Indian government so much that they are 'alter egos' and the airline should be held liable for the arbitration award.

Similar lawsuits are likely to be brought in other countries, primarily with high-value assets. The arbitration award has been registered in countries such as the US, UK, Canada, Singapore, Mauritius, France and the Netherlands.

Cairn has identified USD 70 billion of Indian assets overseas for the potential seizure to collect award, which now totals to USD 1.72 billion after including interest and penalty.

While the Finance Ministry did not immediately offer comments on the matter, a Cairn spokesperson said: "Our strong preference remains an agreed, amicable settlement with the Government of India to draw this matter to a close, and to that end we have submitted a detailed series of proposals to them since February this year."

"However, in the absence of such a settlement, Cairn must take all necessary legal actions to protect the interests of its international shareholders," the spokesperson said without elaborating.

Sources said the French court order affects some 20 centrally located properties, belonging to the Indian government, as part of a guarantee of the debt owed to Cairn.

"This is the necessary preparatory step to taking ownership of the properties and ensures that the proceeds of any sales would be due to Cairn," one of the persons said.

Last month Cairn filed a petition with the courts in the Southern District of New York, seeking judicial confirmation that Air India, the national carrier, can be classed as the alter ego of the Indian state and thereby jointly liable for the arbitral award.

Air India has time till mid-July to file a plea contesting the Cairn lawsuit, sources said.

The Government of India, which participated in the arbitration proceeding over four years, has not accepted the award and has filed a ''setting aside'' petition in a court in the Netherlands - the seat of the arbitration.

The move by Cairn is similar to a court in the British Virgin Islands ordering in December last year hotels in New York and Paris owned by Pakistan International Airlines to be used to settle a claim against Pakistan''s government by a Canadian-Chilean copper company.

Crystallex International Corp had brought a similar lawsuit to attach property of Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A (PDVSA), the state-owned oil company of Venezuela, in Delaware couple of years back after the Latin American country failed to pay the firm USD 1.2 billion that an arbitration tribunal had ordered to pay in lieu of the 2011 seizing gold deposits held and developed by the firm.

In 2012, Elliott Management, a buccaneering American hedge fund that held distressed Argentine bonds, seized a handsome tall ship belonging to Argentina's navy.

Recently, French courts ruled that a stifled creditor could seize a business jet belonging to the government of Congo-Brazzaville while it was being serviced at a French airport, as well as USD 30 million from a bank account of the country''s state oil company.

In May, the finance ministry said that the tribunal "improperly exercised jurisdiction over a national tax dispute that the Republic of India never offered and/or agreed to arbitrate".

The ministry called the 2006 reorganisation of Cairn's India business for listing on the local bourses as "abusive tax avoidance scheme that was a gross violation of Indian tax laws, thereby depriving Cairn''s alleged investments of any protection under the India-UK bilateral investment treaty".

The Scottish firm invested in the oil and gas sector in India in 1994 and a decade later it made a huge oil discovery in Rajasthan. In 2006 it listed its Indian assets on the BSE. Five years after that the government passed retroactive tax law and billed Cairn ₹ 10,247 crore plus interest and penalty for the reorganisation tied to the flotation.


https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/cairn-energy-secures-french-court-order-to-seize-20-indian-government-assets-2481825
 
India Supercharged Its Economy 30 Years Ago. Covid Unraveled It In Months

More than 200 million have gone back to earning less than minimum wage, or $5, a day, the Bangalore-based Azim Premji University calculates.

Thirty years ago, on a summer evening in late July, India liberalized its Soviet-style economy in a transformation that eventually pulled about 300 million out of poverty, fueling one of the biggest wealth creations in history.
Then came the world's fastest coronavirus surge which left overflowing hospitals turning away the dying and crematorium smoke darkening city skies.

Years, and perhaps decades, of progress have been unwound in months, as many Indians who had clawed their way out of poverty face grim job prospects and carry heavy debt loads wracked up to get themselves and loved ones through the pandemic. The devastation has highlighted just how much poor health care and infrastructure -- often neglected in the boom after liberalization -- are holding back the nation and its people.

More than 200 million have gone back to earning less than minimum wage, or $5, a day, the Bangalore-based Azim Premji University calculates. The middle class, the engine of the consumer economy, shrank by 32 million in 2020, according to the Pew Research Institute. That means India will be regressing on vital fronts just as its global importance is growing.

This decade, India is expected to become the world's most populated nation, taking that mantle from China, which for years drove global growth. But the Indian economy is grappling with big threats even as it becomes home to the kind of young, working-age population that drove lengthy booms in other nations.

"We're talking about a decade of lost opportunities and setback," said Arvind Subramanian, a fellow at Brown University and a former chief economic advisor to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration.

"Unless there are some big reforms and fundamental changes in the way economic policy is done, you're not going to be anywhere close to what we saw in the boom years. A lot needs to happen in order to get back to the 7%, 8% growth that we desperately need."

Even before the pandemic, cracks had begun to emerge. PM Modi came to power in 2014 amid voter frustration over scandals and policy paralysis that had contributed to bad loans at banks and threatened to derail Indian growth. Yet, the economy has faced other hurdles in recent years including PM Modi's 2016 cash ban, which roiled the informal sector, and a hurriedly implemented new tax system.

PM Modi had pledged to turn India into a $5 trillion economy by 2025, but the pandemic is set to push that back by years. The International Monetary Fund expects India to grow 6.9% in the next fiscal year that starts in April 2022, lower than the more than 8% needed long term to reach PM Modi's ambitious target and create jobs for the millions entering the work force.

Jim O'Neill, chairman of Chatham House in London - who coined the term BRICs to describe the emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China while serving as a top Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist - is these days cautious on India, largely because the government hasn't made many of the long-term structural changes he believes are needed for it to reach its full potential.

When still at Goldman Sachs, O'Neill says he presented a paper to PM Modi in 2013, before he became prime minister, recommending 10 things that would allow the Indian economy to be 40 times larger by 2050. The list included making substantial improvements to areas like infrastructure, education, introducing better public-private partnerships in areas like healthcare, further liberalizing financial markets and working on environmental issues. PM Modi hasn't fully pursued these ideas, O'Neill said.

"India's got these fantastic demographics, which should have given it the potential to be rising a lot more strongly, possibly at the same kind of double digit rates China enjoyed for a long time," O'Neill said. Yet "the Indian system seems to quite often smother itself, as we've seen sadly a few times during the Covid pandemic," he said.

A government spokesperson didn't respond to request for comment, but the PM Modi administration has in recent weeks acknowledged the need for longer term changes. "If we are looking at getting growth - of 8%-10% - back on a sustainable path, we have to think about not just a current revival," Sanjeev Sanyal, the government's principal economic adviser, said at the India Global Forum on June 30. Structural changes are needed and to that end the government is constantly opening up new sectors of the economy, he said.

Once the fastest-growing major economy, India saw its biggest ever contraction last year - shrinking more than 7% - after a stringent nationwide lockdown. Just when the economy started showing some momentum, another wave of infections hit the nation. This year, the central bank expects India to grow at 9.5%, sharply lower than the double-digit rebound many had earlier expected. That estimate is heavily boosted by the comparison with the sharp contraction of the previous year, and many economists expect it could be pared even further.

Foreign direct investment surged 19% last year, but even that remains lower as a percentage of GDP compared with countries like Singapore and Vietnam. And a big portion of the foreign investment went to billionaire Mukesh Ambani's digital platforms.

Some experts, including former central bank head Duvvuri Subbarao, have warned of a K-shaped recovery for India, where the rich get richer and poor get poorer. "Growing inequalities are not just a moral issue," said Subbarao. "They can erode consumption and hurt our long-term growth prospects."

The of the two richest men in Asia - Ambani and ports magnate Gautam Adani -- are Indians, and their net worth has surged as stocks rallied on the back of cheap liquidity worldwide and tax cuts for companies even as economic growth slumped. Meanwhile, overall Indian wealth -- or the value of financial and real assets owned by households minus debts -- fell by $594 billion, or 4.4%, in 2020, according to Credit Suisse Group AG.

Thirty years ago, India was forced to remake its economy. A mammoth trade deficit and plunging foreign exchange reserves necessitated a loan from the International Monetary Fund. On July 24, 1991, then finance minister, Manmohan Singh, announced major steps to cut tariffs and encourage trade, essentially opening up the economy to the outside world.

In the boom that followed liberalization, growth crossed 8%. Technology giants like Infosys were born and start-ups worth billions are now mushrooming in Bangalore. A new middle class emerged that watched Netflix and shopped online on Amazon. In the south, the Wistron factory won special economic benefits to assemble Apple iPhones. India became the world's biggest supplier of generic medicines and the Serum Institute of India became the world's biggest vaccine maker. An Indian exchange now handles the world's highest number of derivatives contracts.

Yet there were signs that India wasn't hitting its full potential. Average GDP growth of 6.2% over 30 years has been lower than China's 9.2% and even lagged Vietnam's 6.7%. For years, Indians have been living shorter lives and are now earning less on average than people in smaller nations like Bangladesh.

Vast inequities developed. Researchers have found wealthier people in urban areas and from upper castes were taller in India, a sign of development favoring groups that were already advantaged. The percentage of women joining the workforce fell from 30.3% in 1991 to about 21% in 2019, according to data from the International Labor Organization. India's government spent less than 2% of GDP on healthcare before the pandemic.

"Had the healthcare system not been so neglected for so long, India would have been prepared to face the Covid-19 crisis," said Jean Dreze, the Belgian-born Indian economist and a lecturer at Delhi University. "Had India built a more robust social security system, the humanitarian toll of the crisis would not have been so catastrophic."

Unlike the old guard in 1991, PM Modi has turned the economy more inward, focusing on self-reliance and homegrown companies. Despite championing free trade in global forums, he's raised tariffs on goods including electronics and medical equipment, partly reflecting global trends.

Some of those decisions came back to haunt India when citizens struggled to import life-saving products like oxygen concentrators during the pandemic. Top scientists wrote to PM Modi, asking him to reverse protectionist duties imposed on key items needed to study the coronavirus and its variants including the delta one, which now threatens the globe.

People wait to refill oxygen cylinders during a lockdown in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India, on Monday, May 3, 2021. India's fierce second wave has overwhelmed the nation's underfunded health system, with infections topping 400,000 cases in a day and hospitals running out of beds, oxygen and medical supplies.

After pledging to contribute to global vaccine programs, the PM Modi government slowed exports of Covid-19 shots, derailing the inoculation program of a World Health Organization-backed initiative.

"India's ambition of being seen as a major player on the world stage has taken a substantial hit as the pandemic has laid bare the weaknesses in the capacity and competence of its government," said Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University.

The key question for global investors now is whether India will get old before Indians get rich. Netflix is counting on India for its next 100 million customers. Bezos is pouring billions of dollars -- and even braving Indian courts -- to battle India's richest man Ambani for a slice of the only open retail market with more than a billion people.

"The pandemic has set us back hugely, and we were already on a growth downswing when it happened," said Indira Rajaraman, an economist and a former member of the Reserve Bank of India's board. "Going forward it all depends on how cleverly we design the way we come out of these doldrums."

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/india-supercharged-its-economy-30-years-ago-covid-unraveled-it-in-months-2481758
 
So the Indian government is making U-turns on tax revenues and promises, further endorsing the fact India is broke.
 
Unemployment rate rises in both urban and rural areas: CMIE

According to CMIE, which tracks the labour market with proprietary tools, urban unemployment continues to be higher than rural at 8.01%, up from 7.94% in the previous week

India’s unemployment rate soared to 7.14% in the week ending July 25, compared to a 5.98% rise in the previous week (ending July 18), as joblessness increased both in urban areas and the hinterland, data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) on Monday showed.

However, on a monthly basis, the joblessness rate showed an improvement, inching down from the near 10% levels in June, with economic activities picking pace as the second wave of coronavirus disease infections began to taper.

Even so, unemployment, mainly due to the effects of restrictions imposed due to the pandemic, remains high, experts said. Unemployment data from the CMIE, a widely cited gauge, are not considered to be official, but the country officially doesn’t put out similar high-frequency employment/unemployment data.

According to CMIE, which tracks the labour market with proprietary tools, urban unemployment continues to be higher than rural at 8.01%, up from 7.94% in the previous week. The rural joblessness rate stood at 6.75%, a sharper rise from 5.1% in the previous week.

On Monday, another widely cited barometer of business expansion, The Nomura India Business Resumption Index (NIBRI), dropped to 95.3 for the week ending July 25 from 96.4 in the previous week. A fall in the index represents a dip in business activity. The index was “still at levels prior to the second wave but 4.7 percentage points below pre-pandemic levels”, Nomura, an investment firm which complies the index, stated.

In any jobs survey, people with jobs are categorised as employed. People without jobs but looking for work are considered unemployed. The labour force participation rate is equal to people who are employed plus those who are not. Simply put, the unemployment rate is then the number of unemployed divided by the labour force times 100.

Monday’s numbers show the rural impact of the second wave, which had a “deeper and wider penetration into the hinterland”, said Gautam Shahi, an economist with the ratings firm, Crisil Ltd.

Most economists agree that growth and employment will see improvements in the coming weeks, but the key variable still is vaccination. “The pace of vaccinations stagnated, with the month-to-date average in July at ~3.7mn doses/day. We currently forecast a faster pace of vaccination starting in August, but the recent pace suggests risks are skewed towards a delay,” Sonal Varma, economist with Nomura Securities, wrote in a note.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/unemployment-rate-rises-in-both-urban-and-rural-areas-cmie-101627296519884.html
 
Luxembourg has a higher GDP/Capita than India. Thus Luxembourg has a stronger economy if you want to floor the path of the delusional Hindutava keyboard warriors

seriously stop embarrassing yourself, every time I see a post of yours about economics I feel like pulling my hair out.
I remember you the guy who was comparing Indias monthly exports/FDI with Pakistan's for entire year lol
 
Lookup Vodafone in India. From memory a 3-4 Billion U-turn, hence Vodafone went to the courts.

Again you make no sense. How on earth is this even relevant when you talk about Tax collections? where is the U-turn? This is was a transaction which Indian govt said 15 years back that Vodafone was entitled to pay taxes and Vodafone contested that.
You probably not aware they still owe nearly $10 billion ordered by court which they have been begging to recalculate.
As for 3-4 billion, you make it as though its actually a big deal.

Make some sense please.
 
He will say higher FDI means western countries using us for cheap labour and we poor Indians have no clue how we are being exploited lol

We want to be exploited just like the South Koreans, the Chinese and the Singaporeans were exploited :))
 
Again you make no sense. How on earth is this even relevant when you talk about Tax collections? where is the U-turn? This is was a transaction which Indian govt said 15 years back that Vodafone was entitled to pay taxes and Vodafone contested that.
You probably not aware they still owe nearly $10 billion ordered by court which they have been begging to recalculate.
As for 3-4 billion, you make it as though its actually a big deal.

Make some sense please.

Read the link, Indian gov promised Vodafone a taxbreak , then made a Uturn and demanded full tax.

Read before you post nonsense.
 
ok lets assume this is correct, but seriously this was in 2007 ..what is its relevance ?

It has relevance to the extent that it shows investment in India is protected by laws and the Indian government respects court decisions.

This is probably too complicated an idea for some people to understand.

India received $82 billion FDI last year because investors feel secure.
 
Fuel Prices Not Coming Down As States Don't Want It Under GST: Petroleum Minister

"If your question is do you want the petrol prices to come down then the answer is yes. Now, if your question is why the petrol prices are not coming down, then the answer is because the states don't want to bring it under GST," Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.

Petrol prices in the country are not coming down as the states do not want to bring fuel under the ambit of the Goods and Services Tax or GST, Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.
In an interview to news agency Press Trust of India in Kolkata, Mr Puri said petrol prices crossed the ₹ 100-mark in West Bengal as the Trinamool government is levying heavy taxes.

"If your question is do you want the petrol prices to come down then the answer is yes. Now, if your question is why the petrol prices are not coming down, then the answer is because the states don't want to bring it under GST," he said.

"The Centre charges ₹ 32 per litre (as taxes on petrol). We charged ₹ 32 per litre when the fuel price was USD 19 per barrel, and we are still charging the same even when the price rose to USD 75 per barrel. With this ₹ 32 per litre, we provide free ration, free housing and Ujjawala, among several other schemes, to the people," he said.

Mr Puri said the West Bengal government increased prices by ₹ 3.51 per litre since July, resulting in the petrol crossing the century-mark.

"The combined taxation is around 40 per cent here (West Bengal). It is very easy to make statements. Had you (TMC government) not increased the price by ₹ 3.51, then it would have been still under ₹ 100 per litre," he said.

Hardeep Puri was in Kolkata on Wednesday to campaign for the Bhabanipur by-election in which Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee is the Trinamool candidate against BJP's Priyanka Tibrewal and CPI(M)'s Srijib Biswas.

"If the result of the Bhabanipur by-election is a foregone conclusion, then why is the entire state cabinet campaigning there? We are confident about a victory, and post-poll violence is a major issue in this poll," he claimed.

On the political developments in Punjab, Mr Puri said it reflects the "terminal decline" of the Congress.

"Definitely it is an indication of Congress party's terminal decline. I am choosing my words very carefully. In Bengal, they fought with one set of allies. In Kerala, they fought with a different set of allies. They are drawing almost blank everywhere. In UP, where the Congress party grew up, I don't know who wants to partner them," he said.

"What is going with the Congress in Punjab is a comedy and theatre of the absurd," Mr Puri added.

Pitching for the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the minister said the Afghanistan crisis proved why it was necessary.

"When the legislation was conceptualised, it was very clear that minority community in our neighbourhood would be facing a challenging situation," he said.

"In CAA, the cut-off date is 2014, and those who had opposed it are now saying that the cut-off date should be made 2021. CAA is to deal with persecuted minorities who fear for their life. As part of our overall philosophy, India as a country has accepted refugees. Those who had opposed CAA then are now looking silly," he said.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/petrol-price-diesel-price-not-coming-down-as-states-dont-want-it-under-gst-petroleum-minister-2550848
 
The iconic Pakistan versus India Group 1 clash at the ICC T20 World Cup (2021)

Union minister Nitin Gadkari on Friday said he has asked US-based Tesla several times to manufacture its iconic electric vehicles in India, while assuring that all support will be provided by the government to the company.

Addressing 'India Today Conclave 2021', Gadkari further said electric cars manufactured by Tata Motors are not less good than electric cars manufactured by Tesla.

"I have told Tesla that don't sell electric cars in India which your company has manufactured in China. You should manufactureelectric cars in India, and also export cars from India," he said.

Tesla has demanded reduction in import duties on electric vehicles (EVs) in India.

"Whatever support you (Tesla) want, will be provided by our government," Gadkari added.

The road transport and highways minister said that he is still in dialogue with Tesla officials regarding the company's demand related to tax concessions.

Last month, the heavy industries ministry had also asked Tesla to first start manufacturing its iconic electric vehicles in India before any tax concessions can be considered.

At present, cars imported as completely built units (CBUs) attract customs duty ranging from 60-100 per cent, depending on engine size and cost, insurance and freight (CIF) value less or above USD 40,000.


A tax fix for our stalled automobile industry
In a letter to the road ministry, the US firm had stated that the effective import tariff of 110 per cent on vehicles with customs value above USD 40,000 is "prohibitive" to zero-emission vehicles.

It has requested the government to standardize the tariff on electric cars to 40 per cent irrespective of the customs value, and withdraw the social welfare surcharge of 10 per cent on electric cars. It has stated that these changes would boost the development of the Indian EV ecosystem and the company will make significant direct investments in sales, service, and charging infrastructure; and significantly increase procurement from India for its global operations.

The company has argued that these proposals would not have any negative impact on the Indian automotive market as no Indian OEM currently produces a car (EV or ICE) with ex-factory price above USD 40,000 and only 1-2 per cent of cars sold in India (EV or ICE) have ex-factory/customs value above USD 40,000.

Recently, Gadkari had said Tesla has a golden opportunity to set up its manufacturing facility in India given the country's thrust on e-vehicles.

Tesla is already sourcing various auto components from Indian automakers and setting up base here would be economically viable for it, he had said.

https://www.livemint.com/
 
Cow and its urine & dung can help strengthen India’s economy, says CM Chouhan

New Delhi: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan Saturday said cows and their dung and urine can help “strengthen the economy” of the state and country, if a proper system is put in place.

Chouhan claimed if women working in the field of cattle-rearing come forward, “our success is assured”.

https://theprint.in/politics/cow-an...ngthen-indias-economy-says-cm-chouhan/765772/
 
How many trillions will be added by cows to the Indian economy?
 
Cow and its urine & dung can help strengthen India’s economy, says CM Chouhan

New Delhi: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan Saturday said cows and their dung and urine can help “strengthen the economy” of the state and country, if a proper system is put in place.

Chouhan claimed if women working in the field of cattle-rearing come forward, “our success is assured”.

https://theprint.in/politics/cow-an...ngthen-indias-economy-says-cm-chouhan/765772/

I assume they are pandering to some segments of voters. Politicians are ridiculous that way. Cow and cow dung all of a sudden have all the healing powers and is a massive asset only India owns. Just crazy. There's also some woman politician that was being photographed sweeping rooms while promising scooties and cash to women if she wins. That's bribery. India needs to get rid of these drama queens, corrupt politicians and crazy cow theorists.
 
How many trillions will be added by cows to the Indian economy?

Zero. Infact they will lose the cash they have if they keep donating scooties and cash to voters as poll promises. It's all crazy man
 
Was cow references always this common in Indian politics or is this just a recent phenomenon?

As a kid I would hear comments from Muslims about cow dung and cow urine in relation to Hindus. And I always used to think those are just hindjphobic haters.

So color me surprised at realizing the actual love for cow excrements
 
https://www.deccanherald.com/amp/bu...layers-and-other-details-to-know-1149926.html

India enters 5G era: Top cities for 5G launch, telecom players and other details to know

network.

* Besides powering ultra-low latency connections, which allow downloading full-length high-quality video or movie to a mobile device in a matter of seconds (even in crowded areas), 5G can enable solutions such as e-health, connected vehicles, more-immersive augmented reality and metaverse experiences, life-saving use cases, and advanced mobile cloud gaming, among others.

"5G can unleash new economic opportunities and societal benefits giving it the potential for being a transformational force for Indian society. It will help the country leapfrog the traditional barriers to development, spur innovations by startups and business enterprises as well as advance the 'Digital India' vision," the official release said.

——————

hopefully we can add new age jobs for the college grads.
 
Demonetisation "Well-Considered" Decision To Combat Black Money, Terror Financing: Centre To Supreme Court
8
New Delhi:

The 2016 demonetisation was a "well-considered" decision and part of a larger strategy to combat the menace of fake money, terror financing, black money and tax evasion, the Union government has told the Supreme Court.

Defending its decision to demonetise currency notes of ₹ 500 and ₹ 1,000 denominations, the Centre told the top court the step was taken after extensive consultation with the Reserve Bank of India and advance preparations were made before the note ban was enforced.

The submissions were made in an affidavit filed in response to a batch of pleas challenging the Centre's 2016 demonetisation decision.

"The withdrawal of the legal tender character of the specified bank notes was by itself an effective measure and was also a part of a larger strategy for combating the menace of fake money, terror financing, black money and tax evasion, but not confined to them alone.

"It was an economic policy decision exercised in accordance with powers conferred by an Act of the Parliament (RBI Act, 1934), in conformity with the provisions of the said Act and was subsequently affirmatively taken note of by the Parliament in the Specified Bank Notes (Cessation of Liabilities) Act, 2017," the Centre submitted.

The withdrawal of the legal tender character of the specified bank notes was one of the critical steps in the series of transformational economic policy steps, it said.

A five-judge constitution bench comprising Justices S A Nazeer, B R Gavai, A S Bopanna, V Ramasubramanian, and B V Nagarathna is hearing the issue and is slated to take up the matter on November 24.

The Union government submitted the decision of demonetisation was executed on the specific recommendation of the Central Board of the Reserve Bank of India and the RBI had also proposed a draft scheme for the implementation of the recommendation.

"The Central Board of the RBI made a specific recommendation to the central government for the withdrawal of legal tender character of the existing series of ₹ 500 and ₹ 1,000 banknotes.

"The RBI also proposed a draft scheme for the implementation of the recommendation. The recommendation and the draft scheme were duly considered by the Central Government and, based on that, the Notification was published in the Gazette of India declaring that the specified bank notes shall cease to be legal tender," it said.

Contending that wide-ranging measures were taken to minimise and mitigate the hardships faced by the people, the Centre said that it exempted specified bank notes from ceasing to be legal tender for certain transactions such as booking bus, train and air tickets, treatment at Government Hospitals, purchase of LPG cylinders, etc.

"Rooting out the menace of fake currency, black money and financing of subversive activities, expansion of the formal sector, digitalisation of transactions, expanding communication connectivity to enable last mile reach, broadening the tax base, enhancing tax compliance... were high on the economic policy agenda of the government," the Centre said.

It also mentioned lowering the cost of business, facilitating financial inclusion, and removal of long-term perennial distortions on the informal sector side.

On November 9, Attorney General R Venkataramani apologised to the bench for not being able to prepare the comprehensive affidavit and sought a week.

Justice Nagarathna had observed that normally the Constitution Bench does not rise like this and it was very embarrassing.

The top court granted one week to the Centre to file an affidavit.

The bench was hearing a batch of 58 petitions challenging the Centre's November 8, 2016 decision to demonetise the ₹ 1000 and ₹ 500 denomination currency notes.

On December 16, 2016, a bench headed by then Chief Justice TS Thakur referred the question of the validity of the decision and other related matters to a larger bench of five judges for an authoritative pronouncement.

NDTV
 
"PM Had Promised 2 Crore Jobs. It's Been 8 Years": A Owaisi In Gujarat

Danilimda, Gujarat: All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) chief Asaduddin Owaisi attacked Prime Minister Narendra Modi over unemployment in the country by cracking a joke. He said he met a young man at a hotel who used a joke to explain his situation in life.

"Main jis ladki se shaadi karna chahta hun, usne mujhse aa kar kaha ki 'aapki sarkari naukri kab lagegi, papa ladka dhund rahe hain (The girl with whom I want to get married asked me when will you get a government job? My father is looking for a bridegroom)," Mr Owaisi quoted the man as telling him in a rally on Tuesday.

According to Mr Owaisi, the man told his girlfriend, "Modi sarkar par bharosa mat karo, tum shadi kar lo' (Do not trust the Modi government, you get married)," Mr Owaisi added quoting the man, while taking a jibe at PM Modi over the lack of government jobs in the country.

Hitting out at the "reduced" number of jobs to be provided till 2024, in comparison to those announced during the BJP campaign for the 2014 General Elections, the AIMIM chief said, "PM Modi had promised to give 2 crore jobs in 2014. It's been eight years, now he says 10 lakh jobs will be given till 2024. 16 crore jobs should have been given till now. Now he has reduced it to 10 lakh jobs."

AIMIM is contesting 14 seats in the upcoming Gujarat Assembly polls for which the party announced the names of 14 candidates.

The party is looking to garner some voter share and attacking the government for the same over unemployment and the recent Morbi bridge collapse incident that claimed the lives of over 130 people.

Mr Owaisi on Monday attacked the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) seeking the ruling party's accountability for the Morbi bridge mishap.

Addressing a public meeting in Ahmedabad, Mr Owaisi said, "If BJP takes credit for making Gujarat, they should also tell us who is responsible for making Morbi bridge where 140 people died due to collapse. But still, the company's rich people are not caught. PM Modi, why do you love rich people?"

The Morbi incident took place weeks ahead of the announcement of the elections in the state earlier this month, triggering speculations of a political setback for the ruling BJP in the state.

Last week, Mr Owaisi was greeted with "Modi-Modi" chants and was shown black flags as he was campaigning for his party candidate from the East Surat constituency in the upcoming assembly elections in Gujarat.

In videos that went viral on social media, the youths could be seen waving black flags as a mark of protest against the AIMIM chief in the city. Mr Owaisi, however, ignored the protest and appealed to people to support his party in the upcoming assembly elections during the rally.

The Elections for the 182-member State Assembly will be held in two phases on December 1 and 5. The counting of votes will be taken up on December 8.

In Gujarat, the ruling BJP has been in power for over 27 years and is seeking its seventh term in office.

NDTV
 
Finance Ministry To Meet Bank Chiefs To Promote Cross-Border Trade In Rupee

New Delhi: The Finance Ministry has called a meeting of CEOs (Chief Executive Officers) of banks, including top six private sector lenders, on December 5 to discuss ways to promote cross-border trade in the rupee instead of the US dollar.

Besides, sources said the meeting to be attended by other stakeholders, including senior officials of external affairs and commerce ministries, will review the progress made on this front so far.

Financial Services Secretary Vivek Joshi will be chairing the meeting and is also likely to see attendance from representatives of the Reserve Bank of India and Indian Banks' Association (IBA), sources said.

Following detailed guidelines from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on cross-border trade transactions in domestic currency in July, about nine special vostro accounts have been opened with two Indian banks to facilitate overseas trade in the rupee.

Sberbank and VTB Bank -- the largest and second-largest banks of Russia, respectively -- are the first foreign lenders to receive the approval after the RBI announced the guidelines.

RBI as per the guidelines decided to put in place an additional arrangement for invoicing, payment, and settlement of exports/imports in INR.

Another Russian bank Gazprom, which does not have its bank in India, has also opened this account with Kolkata-based UCO Bank.

The move to open the special vostro account clears the deck for settlement of payments in the rupee for trade between India and Russia, enabling cross-border trade in the Indian currency, which the RBI is keen to promote.

The RBI has allowed the special vostro accounts to invest the surplus balance in Indian government securities to help popularise the new arrangement.

UCO Bank already has a vostro account-based facility in Iran. Gazprombank, or GPB, is a privately-owned Russian lender and the third-largest bank in the country by assets.

"Indian importers undertaking imports through this mechanism shall make payment in INR, which shall be credited into the special vostro account of the correspondent bank of the partner country, against the invoices for the supply of goods or services from the overseas seller/supplier," RBI had said earlier.

NDTV
 
India All Set To Become USD 5 Trillion Economy By 2025: Nitin Gadkari

India is the fastest growing major economy in the world and is all set to achieve USD 5 trillion GDP by 2024-25, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari said today.

Addressing an event organised by industry body FICCI, Mr Gadkari said the central government is aiming to boost growth and employment to achieve sustainable development.

The road transport and highways minister said India will play a key role in achieving global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 2030.

Mr Gadkari noted that India needs to increase its exports and reduce imports.

"We are also working on developing alternative, clean and green fuel like bio ethanol, bio-CNG, bio-LNG and green hydrogen," he said, adding green hydrogen is the fuel for the future.

The minister said currently India's automobile industry is worth ₹ 7.5 lakh crore and he wants to take it to ₹ 15 lakh crore. "This will create lots of new jobs."

He also said his focus is on reducing cost of construction. "We are trying to minimise use of steel and cement."

NDTV
 
Was Demonetisation Valid? Supreme Court Verdict On January 2

The Supreme Court is scheduled to pronounce its judgment on January 2 on a batch of pleas challenging the government's 2016 decision to demonetise currency notes of ₹ 1,000 and ₹ 500 denominations.

A five-judge Constitution bench headed by Justice S A Nazeer, who will retire on January 4, is likely to pronounce its verdict on the matter on the said date.

The top court had, on December 7, directed the Centre and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to put on record the relevant records relating to the government's 2016 decision and reserved its verdict.

The bench, also comprising justices B R Gavai, A S Bopanna, V Ramasubramanian and B V Nagarathna, had heard the submissions of Attorney General R Venkataramani, the RBI's counsel and the petitioners' lawyers, including senior advocates P Chidambaram and Shyam Divan.

Calling the scrapping of the ₹ 500 and ₹ 1,000 currency notes deeply flawed, P Chidambaram had argued that the government cannot on its own initiate any proposal relating to legal tender, which can only be done on the recommendation of the RBI's central board.

Resisting the top court's attempt to revisit the 2016 demonetisation exercise, the government had said the court cannot decide a matter when no tangible relief can be granted by way of "putting the clock back" and "unscrambling a scrambled egg".

The RBI had earlier admitted in its submissions that there were "temporary hardships" and that those too are an integral part of the nation-building process, but there was a mechanism by which the problems that arose were solved.

In an affidavit, the Centre told the top court recently that the demonetisation exercise was a "well-considered" decision and part of a larger strategy to combat the menace of fake money, terror financing, black money and tax evasion.

The Supreme Court was hearing a batch of 58 petitions challenging the demonetisation exercise announced by the Centre on November 8, 2016.

NDTV
 
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