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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Slum dogs Free India Next Flagship Mission to Accomplish Realty Dreams and the draft Direct Taxes Code!

Slum dogs Free India Next Flagship Mission to Accomplish Realty Dreams and the draft Direct Taxes Code!

Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, Chapter 327

Palash Biswas


 Results 1 - 10 of about 2,990,000 for Realty Boom in India. (0.39 seconds) 

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  1. Real Estate

    Almost 80 per cent of real estate developed in India is residential space, ... 100 per cent FDI allowed in realty projects through the automatic route. ...
    www.ibef.org/industry/realestate.aspx - Cached - Similar -
  2. The bang in realty boom

    The bang in realty boom. The Financial Express: December 28, 2006 ... According to a recent Assocham study (Future of Real Estate Investment in India), ...
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  3. Boom in India Real Estate

    Boom in India Real Estate is being observed in the real estate of not only domestic property but also commercial properties.
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  4. interim thoughts...: Real estate boom in India (Bangalore)

    There is an unprecedented real estate boom in parts of India. These are the National Capital .... The realty in Bangalore is clearly heading down . ...
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  5. Can India sustain the real estate boom?

    28 Oct 2006 ... Can India sustain the real estate boom? ... of the Bengal chapter of the Confederation of Real Estate Developers Association of India, ...
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  6. Indian real estate: boom or bubble? - July 10, 2006

    10 Jul 2006 ... Merrill Lynch forecasts that the Indian realty sector will grow from $12 billion in 2005 to $90 billion by 2015. "India is the most exciting ...
    money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune.../index.htm - Cached - Similar -
  7. Real estate boom in india will continue in 2007

    The real estate boom of 2006 is set to multiply itself in 2007 to get India a foreign capital of over Rs. 8000 crore with leading international investors ...
    www.nriinternet.com/.../INDIA/.../23_RE_Boom_2006_Continue2007.htm - Cached - Similar -
  8. Real Estate India – Indian Property Discussion Forum – No Buy ...

    Banks & Housing Finance Institutions (HFCs) can be regarded as the pillar of the present realty boom in India. But is the increasing interest rates ...
    www.indianrealestateforum.com/ - Cached - Similar -
  9. Mir Realtors :: Eco-friendly living in flats, apartments and ...

    ENJOY TOWNSHIP LIVING As the first builder to have pioneered the self-contained township concept in Kerala, Mir Realtors is developing a new eco-friendly ...
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  10. Real Estate Boom in India is Fundamentals Driven! | Real Estate Times

    16 Aug 2007 ... Real Estate Boom in India is Fundamentals Driven! Now worries in the medium to short term. Spurred by IT growth and a shortage of real ...
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DLF wants to sell life JV stake, scouts for buyers

Economic Times - ‎Aug 5, 2009‎
The first person, a senior executive in the insurance industry, said DLF wants to exit insurance business it entered in 2007 when the realty boom was at its ...

It's right time to buy, say realtors

Deccan Herald - ‎21 hours ago‎
That's the mantra of Confederation of Real Estate & Developer's Association of India's (Credai) — Karnataka chapter. Painting a rosy picture of the industry ...

Bangalore Property is on boom, taking place in India.

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung) - ‎3 hours ago‎
2009-08-12 13:55:16 - Bangalore Property is on boom, taking place in India. Keeping pace with this rocketing real estate market is the Bangalore Real Estate ...

Amid downturn, banks hiked exposure to realty

Times of India - ‎Aug 2, 2009‎
This was not only an increase of 45% over the previous year but was more than double the amount of Rs 44000 crore exposure of these banks during the boom ...

Realty sector begins to look up, ahead: boom by Diwali?

Expressindia.com - Mandakini Gahlot - ‎Aug 3, 2009‎
"It was not as if all the money suddenly disappeared, at least not in India," he said. "There was great fear in but it was a great time to invest in ...

Untapped potential

Express Estates - Praveen K Singh - ‎Aug 9, 2009‎
As the real-estate boom gathered steam (around 2005-2006), a large number of metro-based developers announced housing projects in tier II and tier III ...

Global Real Estate: Boom to Bust to…?

BusinessWeek - Prashant Gopal - ‎Aug 5, 2009‎
Our housing boom coincided, more or less, with booms from India to Russia. And home prices in many of those countries also plunged during the past few years ...

Home buyers return, respite for realty firms

Livemint - Shabana Hussain - ‎Jul 30, 2009‎
DLF Ltd, India's laregst developer by market value, which was also to announce its first-quarter results on Thursday, had not done so by the time this ...

Big-ticket land buys on realty radar again

Livemint - Madhurima NandyShabana Hussain - ‎Aug 2, 2009‎
This lull in buying land, which began sometime in mid-2008, followed a three-year realty boom that saw a spate of expensive transactions and continuous land ...

Sanjeev Sanyal: Building cities for 21st-century India

Business Standard - ‎Aug 4, 2009‎
Thankfully, much of urban India is yet to be built and we have an opportunity to change our model in time for the coming urban boom.


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  1. For India's real slumdogs, dream of a better life is not just ...

    10 Jan 2009 ... British director's film about boy from Mumbai backstreets is recognisable portrait of everyday life.
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  1. Slum Dwellers in Indian Cities: The Case of Surat in Western India

    Downloadable! Among the many problems associated with urban growth in India, an increase in the proportion of slums and squatters especially in its 'metros' ...
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  2. Slumdwellers of India cities - The sad story of good people ...

    3 posts - Last post: 15 May 2004
    Slumdwellers of India cities - The sad story of good people Government of India expose Politicians.
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  3. Homeless International - India: SPARC

    According to UN-HABITAT, India is home to 63% of all slum dwellers in South Asia. This amounts to 170 million people, 17% of the world's slum dwellers. ...
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  4. Slum dwellers in India and risk of HIV.

    Slum dwellers in India and risk of HIV. Haque I, Sharma U; International Conference on AIDS. Int Conf AIDS. 2002 Jul 7-12; 14: abstract no. WePeE6517. ...
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  5. SDI Synopsis Misereor - SHACK / SLUM DWELLERS INTERNATIONAL [SDI]

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  6. who are the slum-dwellers in India - Sulekha coffeehouse Forums

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    who are the slum-dwellers in India. started by Seva 6 mnths ago. From the discussions on TV etc. about slumdog movie, I have noticed that people (outsiders ...
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  7. India - Slum dwellers organise against demolitions

    The recent spate of demolitions has brought slum dwellers together and an umbrella organization "Jan Aandolan" (People's Movement) has been formed. ...
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  8. Health insurance scheme proposed for slum dwellers - Express India

    3 Dec 2008 ... Pune For the first time in the city, a health insurance scheme for slum dwellers has been proposed as part of the services to be delivered ...
    www.expressindia.com/latest-news/health...slum-dwellers/393659/ - Similar -
  9. CHF International Creating a Virtual Marketplace for India's Slum ...

    21 Jul 2009 ... CHF International Creating a Virtual Marketplace for India's Slum Dwellers. CHF International receives $1 million from the Bill & Melinda ...
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  10. Creating a Virtual Marketplace for India's Slum Dwellers | Reuters

    CHF International receives $1 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to connect India's slum population with jobs using cellular technology SILVER ...
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  11. News results for Slum Dwellers in India

    Govt to roll out Rs 225k cr plan to house slum dwellers‎ - 19 hours ago
    NEW DELHI: In its most ambitious bid ever to house 6-crore slum dwellers and realise the vision of a slum-free India, the government is rolling out a ...
    Economic Times - 2 related articles »
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Foreigners lend helping hand to slum dwellers

Times of India - Shoeb Khan - ‎Jul 28, 2009‎
"Drama, theatre and play are the most powerful medium of communication in India. I help these NGO members hone their artistic skills, who are creating ...

PGMA asks HUDCC to study India's "slum program"

Philippine Information Agency - ‎Aug 10, 2009‎
The project focuses on according property rights to slum dwellers and urban poor. It would as well provide basic amenities such as water supply, sewerage, ...

Survey of Slum Dwellers and Employment Schemes

Press Information Bureau (press release) - ‎Aug 6, 2009‎
The Minister of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation Kumari Selja has said that the Census of India, 2001 conducted enumeration of slum population in 640 ...

Ownership right to slum dwellers

Press Information Bureau (press release) - ‎Jul 31, 2009‎
In a written reply in the Lok Sabha today she said the Government's effort would be to create a slum free India through the Rajiv Awas Yojana in the next ...

Officials to focus on one project at a time

Times of India - ‎Jul 21, 2009‎
JNNURM special officer P Manivannan, on Tuesday reviewed the housing projects for the slum dwellers which are lagging behind. The Rs 209 crore project to ...

Rain leaves region standstill

Express Buzz - ‎9 hours ago‎
There were reports of dwellers of a slum behind RBI Colony conducting "puja" soon after the tremors were felt while some buildings in the City had developed ...

A Changed Context

Canadian Architect - ‎22 hours ago‎
Slum clearance was expected to help eliminate substandard housing stock, and former slum-dwellers were to be provided with new public housing. ...

Sunil Sethi: Delhi's double displacement

Business Standard - Sunil Sethi - ‎Aug 7, 2009‎
In Swept off the Map, Jagori, a women's resource group, describes the horror of what happened when 150000 slum dwellers along the river Yamuna were evicted ...


Hollywood script guru is story-hunting in India

Hindu - ‎Aug 7, 2009‎
New Delhi (IANS): After the success of "Slumdog Millionaire", Indian films have gained worldwide appeal, says Hollywood script guru Chadwick Clough, ...
Screen presence The Statesman

Rahman plans concert to relieve racism tension

Indian Express - ‎Aug 11, 2009‎
... between India and Australia following racist attacks. The composer, who won two Academy Awards for his work on the Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack, ...

India's police 'resort to brutality while under crippling pressure'

Times Online - Jeremy Page - ‎Aug 6, 2009‎
No wonder junior Indian police officers often resort to the brutal methods depicted in Slumdog Millionaire — and often far worse. That was the conclusion of ...

Meet Hollywood's Bollywood Hero

Rediff - ‎Aug 3, 2009‎
Bollywood Hero was shot in India for nearly three months, most of it in Mumbai, and the producers used the crew that had worked on Slumdog. ...
Mumbai's the word The National
Bollywood Hero Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Summer: Hot Reads

Calgary Herald - Anne Sutherland - ‎47 minutes ago‎
Here are five that will entertain and take you places you might otherwise never visit: London, Australia, India, Los Angeles, Rhode Island and Sag Harbor. ...

Karan Johar and SRK sign deal with Fox Star

Daily News & Analysis - Shubha Shetty-Saha - ‎Aug 6, 2009‎
Fox Star studios had earlier successfully distributed Slumdog Millionaire in India. At a press conference arranged to announce the deal, Shah Rukh Khan said ...

AR Rahman to host music show to mark DD's 50 years

Gaea Times - ‎4 hours ago‎
... between India and Australia following racist attacks. The composer, who won two Academy Awards for his work on the Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack, ...

Julia Roberts to shoot in India ashram

Times of India - ‎Aug 8, 2009‎
Some of the Indian crew of Slumdog Millionaire (Danny Boyle) will also be helping in the India part of the production, though the shooting schedule is being ...

High hopes for 'My Name Is Khan'

Digital Spy - Sanjay Odedra - ‎Aug 10, 2009‎
Fox STAR Studios has said that it hopes My Name Is Khan can recreate the success of Slumdog Millionaire, ...



Swine Flu


Swine flu: Stay cool, follow these 7 steps Swine flu death toll in India reaches 17
A 48-year-old man in Pune, swine flu's 'epicentre', is the ninth person to die in 24 hours, and 17th so far in the country.

More >>


http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/



Editorial
Make Tamiflu widely available
It's better to have many outlets for diagnoses & distribution of medicines.
Ailing textile sector
There isn't any quick-fix solution for the industry which exports 55% of output.
Statues speak a lot!
Statue politics is cast in stone, logical way by which leaders define history.

More >>

Columnists
Mythili Bhusnurmath
Core principles of deposit insurance
BCBS and IADI have finally agreed on the following 18 core principles of deposit insurance.
M K VENU
Environmental fundamentalism
For India to avoid coal, West must compensate with fuel-fired electricity.
Raghu Krishnan
Schumi!
Can F1's most successful driver save Ferrari and car-racing?'

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinionshome/897228639.cms

Stress levels rise in the suicide belt

11 Aug 2009, 1750 hrs IST, TNN

YAVATMAL: Nature has once again turned against Vidarbha, the most backward region of Maharashtra, where an overwhelming majority of farmers

depend on rain gods.

The standing crop of cotton, soyabean and jowar in some three million hectares is fast wilting as the region has received little or no rain in the last three weeks. Paddy cultivation has also been severely hit in eastern parts of the region.

A dry spell in the middle of the kharif season has left farmers despondent . The jowar crop is already lost, soyabean has suffered 60% damage and even the cotton crop is facing the heat.

The region's main farming season had a faltering start as monsoon arrived late almost by a month. But once it started raining from June-end farmers expected the season to proceed smoothly. By early July sowing operations were complete.

Even in the beginning of July it rained well and the seeds germinated, giving the fields a lush green look . It was not to last. The rain stopped as suddenly as it began. Now, the prolonged dry spell has left the standing crop high and dry. With irrigation facilities abysmally poor in these parts, the dependence on rain is total. The situation is worse in Yavatmal district, the epicentre of farmers suicide crisis.

"We are staring at an unprecedented drought. The water level in major dams has come down to 34% while the reservoirs and catchment areas have dried up," said social activist Vilas Wankhede. His worst fear is that the drought will now lead to a spurt in crime.

"Incidents of robberies, thefts and house-breaking are on the rise in this otherwise peaceful city. In some cases the involvement of rural youths has surfaced," added Wankhede.

"The farmers are having sleepless nights as they have no fodder or water for the cattle. Distress sale of cattle has begun. At the Sunday weekly market at Pandharkawda 450 cows and 200 buffaloes were brought and were being sold at throwaway prices," said Kishore Tiwari of Vidarbha Jan Andolan Samiti.


Swine flu death toll in India reaches 17

A 48-year-old man died of swine flu here on Wednesday afternoon, the tenth victim of the contagious virus in this Maharashtra city and the 17th in India.

Pune institute in global race for swine flu vaccine

Pune is among the world's leading players trying to develop a vaccine to fight the H1N1 virus.

Swine flu: Mumbai schools to be closed for 7 days

All educational institutions and public places in financial capital Mumbai will be closed for a week from Thursday onwards to arrest the spread of H1N1 influenza.

Private hospitals reluctant to join battle against H1N1

Private sector hospitals, which control 70% of the country's health infrastructure , continue to be reluctant to help in tackling the H1N1 menace.

'Action against airlines erring in H1N1 screening'

Aviation sector regulator has warned airlines operating on international routes of "appropriate action" if they fail to comply with instructions regarding distribution of health screening cards to passengers.

Scare spreads to IIM campuses

Swine flu scares have arrived on IIM campuses. And as the exchange semester draws near, the pandemic fears are changing plans of some of these students.

WHO warns India against flu spread

WHO has cautioned India against the spread of swine flu virus.

Low-key festivals in flu season

Even as the swine flu continues to spread across the state, the state government on Tuesday again left the decision to close down schools to the district administration and school management.

'Monsoon spreading pandemic flu'

H1N1 pandemic flu is spreading in India, Thailand and Vietnam with the onset of Asia's monsoon season, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Tuesday.

Everything you wanted to know about swine flu

The spread of swine flu is fast emerging as No 1 healthcare emergency not just in the country but the world over.

Airlines gear up to combat flu scare

With the flu scare gripping the country, airlines, airports and the travel industry in general, have stepped up measures to combat the H1N1 virus.

Working parents find it doubly difficult

Working parents often display an odd sense of preparedness when confronted with a situation relating to their children.

You still may catch the virus wearing mask

Indiscriminate use of a face masks to prevent Swine flu virus can cause more harm than good, say medical experts.

Flying with Flu: Indian bandobast better than UK

Despite all glitches, there is more visible bandobast for flu in India than London. Everything about Flu | IT cos issue advisory | N 95 mask most wanted on Google

Swine Flu: IT companies issue advisory

Taking precautionary steps against swine flu, Infosys Technologies has restricted both inbound and outbound travel from its development centre in Pune.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/quickieslist/4859280.cms

Rangarajan reappointed PM econ adviser!

Govt to roll out Rs 225k cr plan to house slum dwellers !

Food Security Bill is scrapped thanks to IMMINENT Drought!

The monsoon rainfall deficit widened by one percentage point from the previous day to 29 per cent on August 10, with rains in the

soybean-growing central region weakening. The shortfall in the soybean-growing region of central India widened by 1 percentage point to 20 per cent, government sources told Reuters on Wednesday, raising the prospect of increased imports from the world's top edible oil buyer.

The June-September rains were 42 per cent short until August 10 over the cane-growing region of northwest India, the same as the previous day.

A top government scientist said that the sugarcane crop had already suffered, but the soybean crop could still withstand the dry spell as it was planted late.

"The sugarcane crop has been hit badly but the soybean crop was planted late and it will gain from rains we are expecting soon," the scientist in the Ministry of Earth Sciences, who did not want to be identified, said.

The weather office has forecast good rains in cane and soybean regions in the next few days.

Trade officials have said low rainfall could slash the domestic oilseed supply and raise India's edible oils imports, although the international price and India's winter-sown rapeseed output would be key factors.

"A weak monsoon will lower output of summer-sown oilseed crops, which would reduce domestic edible oil availability, but how much, we have to watch till the monsoon is over," said B V Mehta, executive director of the Solvent Extractors' Association of India.

India buys about half of its total demand from Malaysia, Indonesia, Brazil and Argentina.


STT removal in Direct Taxes code finds favour with market players!


Swine Flue Pandemic is being used as Braincontrol Game to continue Economic reforms without any Resistance under ROTHCHILDS Team Extra constitutional supervision!

I have been insisting that CITIZENSHIP Amendment Act has to be used to Capture Prime Properties in Urban and semi Urban areas, Natural Resources of Super High Commercial Value in aboriginal Tribal Areas! I have been also writing and speaking on Progrrammed and projected Mass Movement, Idelogies, Trade Unions and Insurgency meant for Ethnic Cleansing and Monopolistic aggression!

Unique Identity Number Project and entry of Nilekani and Sunil Mitra heralded the Genocide Plan in the Infinite Death Chamber!

Now, they have pallned another BIG REALTY BOOM to Capture Prime Properties in Urban India under a Flagship Programme! It is HOME for all Slum Dwellers in India!

It is NO SLUMDOG or SLUMDOG Free India Mission!

The prime minister's economic advisory panel has been reconstituted and former central bank governor C Rangarajan has been reappointed

as its chairman, a government statement said on Tuesday.

Rangarajan was heading the panel before becoming a member of parliament last year.

Other members of the new panel are Saumitra Chaudhuri of ICRA, Govinda Rao of National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, Vijay Shankar Vyas of Asian Society of Agricultural Economists and Suman K Bery of National Council of Applied Economic Research.

The panel advises Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on important policy issues, the statement from prime minister's office said.


Warning that farm sector distress can have serious consequences on the economy, PMEAC chairman C Rangarajan on Wednesday asked the

government to raise additional resources to provide relief to drought-hit people and increase import of essential commodities to check price rise.

"Distress in agriculture (due to drought) will have other serious dimensions. The government may have to find additional resources to meet the requirements of the affected people," he said after taking over as the head of the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) for the second time.

As regards the impact of drought on economy, he said, the growth rate could slip to 6-6.5 per cent from 6.7 per cent in the previous fiscal.

"The Indian economy has been doing well in the past several years but the growth rate came down to 6.7 per cent last year because of the impact of international financial crisis... this year the economy will grow between 6 and 6.5 per cent. The drought will have dampening impact on the overall growth rate," he said.

"As a result of the drought there is a tendency of the prices to rise... the stock of foodgrains available with the government is large... but wherever there is a scarcity and where imports are possible we should do it. If the production of pulses fall there should be a greater effort to import pulses," he said.


The removal of Securities Transaction Tax (STT) proposed in the new Direct Taxes Code may prove beneficial for market players as it

may bring back strong volumes, analysts said.

"The abolishment of STT would be beneficial for brokers and day-traders, for whom the cost of transactions had increased considerably, and strong volumes may come back if it is removed," Purpleline Investment Advisors CEO P K Agarwal said.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today released the Direct Taxes Code that would ultimately replace the over four-decades old Income Tax Act and bring all other direct taxes like wealth tax under its purview, if reasonable level of discussion happens on the code, a bill could be placed in the winter session of Parliament.

The radical tax reforms proposed include an abolition of the controversial STT and reintroduction of tax on long term capital gains on securities trading.

Echoing similar sentiments, SMC Global Vice-President Rajesh Jain said, "Removal of STT may bring back strong volumes in the market and may be beneficial for day traders and brokers but long term investors may suffer but that depends which tax is introduced eventually."

Bonanza Portfolio Assistant VP Avinash Gupta said, "The proposal of removal of STT may be beneficial for the market and if the tax introduced in its place is at a lower rate it will be helpful."


The draft Direct Taxes Code proposes raising tax exemption limit on savings to Rs three lakh from the present Rs one lakh, while
suggesting taxing money withdrawn from savings schemes like PPF, EPF and GPF.

"The limit for deduction for savings has been substantially increased to Rs three lakh," an official statement said on the new tax code, which has been put up for public comments.

With regard to withdrawals from savings schemes, the code suggested that these should be taxed under the EET (Exempt Exempt Taxation) mode of tax, implying that the tax should be levied at the time of withdrawal.

With regard to PPF and other pension fund schemes, the code said the government should continue the tax exempt status to withdrawals of amounts accumulated up to March 31, 2011.

The contributions to the PPF and pension schemes after the commencement of the code, it added, should be subject to EET mode of taxation.

Unlike various other saving schemes, withdrawals from PPF, EPF and GPF are not taxed at the time of withdrawal. Withdrawals, it said, should be included in the income of the assessee during the relevant year and taxed accordingly.

EET mode of taxation, the code said would encourage long term savings by the people.

Besides, the code also suggested that retirement benefits would be exempt from tax if saved in the Retirement Benefits Account.


Meanwhile, a delegation of industry representatives met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday and asked the government to take steps to bring

down interest rates to revive economy, particularly the manufacturing sector.

Though state-run banks have reduced interest rates, private sector banks were still to follow suit, Harsh Pati Singhania, president, Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) said.

He said government borrowing programme this fiscal and drought-like conditions could lead to inflation driven by agri- commodity shortages.

"We must ensure that interest rates do not rise or else the recovery process will be adversely impacted," he said.

The central bank cut its lending rate by 4.25 percentage points between October and April to 4.75 per cent and the government slashed duties and increased public spending to stimulate the economy hit by the global slump.

The economy, which expanded by 6.7 per cent in 2008/09 (April/March), is likely to grow by around 6 per cent in 2009/10.

The industry lobby also asked the government to allow foreign investment up to 49 per cent in multi-brand retail sector and auction third-generation wireless spectrum at the earliest in a transparent manner.

On exports, the FICCI wanted more tax incentives "at par with those offered in other developing countries" apart from support to diversify their exports.


How about Mukesh Ambani, Nilekani on Apple board: Report


Stressing the importance of the Indian market, US business magazine BusinessWeek has suggested that Reliance Industries Chairman
Mukesh Ambani and Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani join as directors on the board of software giant Apple.

"An executive who understands the Indian market could be a guiding hand in Apple's board room. How about former Infosys (Co-Chairman) Nandan Nilekani (now serving the government with minister rank)? or Mukesh Ambani, head of Reliance Industries, whose retail subsidiary sells Apple gear in India?," the publication said in an article published online.

Nilekani was recently appointed as Chairperson of India's National Unique Identification Authority and has the rank and status of Cabinet Minister.

Internet giant Google's Chief Executive Officer Eric Schimdt quit Apple's board earlier this month and was a director at the software major since December 2006.

BusinessWeek said that with Schmidt leaving the board, the path is clear for the "company's next likely director, Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook" to join.

"But the challenges that will face the company in the next decade -- which include managing its larger size, reckoning with internet-based computing and growing overseas -- will require more fresh blood on the board," the report noted.


New Tax code: Pay 10% tax for salary up to Rs 10 lakh


The government on Wednesday initiated radical tax reforms through a draft code that aims at moderating income tax rates, abolishing
Securities Transaction Tax and increasing deduction for savings up to Rs three lakh. The new Direct Taxes Code has suggested a significant expansion of personal income-tax slabs, with levels of relief going up with incomes.

Releasing the Direct Taxes Code that will ultimately replace the over four-decades old Income Tax Act and bring all other direct taxes like wealth tax under its purview, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today said if reasonable level of discussion happens on the code, a bill could be placed in the winter session of Parliament.

The Code said that the 10 per cent tax rate should apply to an annual income of Rs 1.6-10 lakh per annum and the 20 per cent rate to Rs 10-25 lakh.

The maximum rate of 30 per cent, it added, should apply to income above Rs 25 lakh per annum.

The new rates, it said, "are expected to yield the existing level of revenues with the revised comprehensive tax base proposed in this code".

Now 10 per cent is levied on incomes of Rs 1.6-3 lakh, 20 per cent on Rs 3-5 lakh and 30 per cent above Rs 5 lakh.

The Code also suggested that perquisites given to employees should be included in salary income, a recommendation that may inflate the taxable income of certain categories of salaried persons.

Besides, the Code also suggested that tax rates for companies should be reduced to 25 per cent for both domestic and overseas companies. Currently, domestic companies are taxed at 30 per cent with surcharge and cess coming later.

Foreign companies should pay an additional tax of 15 per cent as branch profit tax, the Code said.

"We expect to have better compliance and better collection of taxes," Mukherjee said.

While the code proposes abolition of the controversial STT, it also suggests reintroduction of tax on long term capital gains on securities trading.


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"The language is very, very simple. By putting simple language and simple forms, we will eliminate litigations as far as possible," Mukherjee said.

He said it would be possible for most taxpayers to file their returns easily, adding that there were several easy to comprehend illustrations to guide them through the entire process, which today is often seen as complex and confusing.

"I expect people will read it, there would be an informed debate. Of course, we will hold detailed discussions with large numbers of stakeholders."

Home Minister P Chidambaram, who during his tenure in the Finance Ministry had initiated work on the Code, said that this was a brand new Code written from scratch.

"In these 48 years, not only India has changed, the world has changed. Therefore, it is widely accepted that the present code is outdated," Chidambaram said, adding: "It became a happy hunting ground for lawyers. This will be a transformational law."

People should not get perturbed by the large number of pages in the new draft, which runs into 256 pages, Chidambaram said, explaining that the direct tax code of the US ran into 2,000 pages.

The finance minister also placed on the ministry's website a discussion paper on the subject to invite opinion from the public before going to parliament with a proper bill for the legislative changes.


Cash-for-query scam: Court summons 11 ex-MPs


A Delhi court has issued summons against 11 former MPs for being allegedly involved in corrupt practice of taking money for asking

questions in parliament in 2005.

Besides the ex-Parliamentarians, two journalists of web portal cobrapost.com Aniruddha Bahal and Suhasini Raj were also made accused in the chargesheet for abetting the offence under the Prevention of Corruption Act.

Special Judge Rakesh Siddharth sought the presence of the ex-MPs, who were later expelled from parliament after being found guilty by the House Ethics Committee, before the court on August 20.

Delhi Police had chargesheeted the 11 former MPs for misusing their office when they were caught on camera seeking money during a sting operation for asking questions in Parliament in what came to be known as cash-for-query scam.

Among the then lawmakers who were expelled by the Speaker after being caught on camera accepting money in 2005 one Raja Rampal, who was re-elected in 15th Lok Sabha, has not been summoned as his name has been put by the police in column number two (list containing names against whom inquiry is pending) and the police had yet not received sanction for prosecuting him.


RBI intervention likely in 6-12 months to mop up excess money

Corporates expected Reserve Bank to intervene in the next 6-12 months to suck out excess liquidity from the banking system, which meant

increase in key-short term rates, a J P Morgan survey said on Wednesday.

The apex bank's intervention could also happen in the next 3-6 months exerting more pressure on banks to hike rates in the near future, it said.

The survey also said that non-performing assets of banks in the system are likely to increase in the medium term.

"36 per cent of the corporate respondents expect RBI to intervene in the medium term....As a corollary, 28 per cent of all respondents feel that interest rates are set to harden within the next 6-12 months", the survey, prepared by J P Morgan Asset Management and Valuenotes, said.

Corporates also expected their profits and employment opportunities to improve with an expected recovery in the medium term.

The survey - investment confidence index - was conducted among respondents from corporate and retail segments in eight Indian cities in July and will be published on a quarterly basis.


Industrial output to mitigate poor monsoon: Goldman

Goldman Sachs expects economic gains from industrial activity to mitigate the negative impact of poor rains, it said in a note on

Wednesday after government data showed June factory output surged to a 16-month high.

Industrial output rose to 7.8 per cent in June from a year earlier, beating forecasts by a wide margin, as higher salaries of government employees and stimulus spending boosted consumer demand.

Several indicators of consumption and investment demand such as the Purchasing Manager's Index and motor vehicle sales have been showing significant gains, Goldman Sachs said.

Financial conditions have also continued to loosen over the summer, which mitigates the negative impact from a contraction in the agricultural sector due to weak monsoons, said Goldman economists.


India's industrial output to remain strong: HSBC

India's industrial output will continue to be strong, HSBC said in a note

on Wednesday.

"Although the June production number could well prove something of an aberration, bearing in mind just how strong it was, the trend in industrial output is clear and it's certainly not down," Robert Prior-Wandesforde, economist at the bank, wrote.

India's industrial output rose to 7.8 per cent in June from a year earlier, data showed on Wednesday, beating forecasts by a wide margin, as higher salaries of government employees and stimulus spending boosted consumer demand.

While the poor monsoon is creating justifiable concerns about agricultural sector output, today's release suggests there is plenty of momentum in the ex-agricultural sector, the note said.

HSBC expects positive effects to come from India's fiscal and monetary policy actions as well as the stepping up of oil and gas output.

Retail food prices up 32 pc in June-July: Report


Retail prices of food items in India have surged up to a third in two months to July after deficient monsoon rains, a newswebsite

said, citing a report by a news agency.

According to an analysis of 14 essential commodities collated by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, prices of many varieties of lentils, sugar, groundnut oil, tea and potato had risen sharply, it said.

Retail food prices rose up to 32 per cent in June-July, compared with an 18 per cent rise in the year-ago period, it added, quoting report.


It therefore retained its growth forecast of 6.2 per cent for 2009/10 and 8 per cent for 2010/11.


Govt to give Rs 10,000 cr to banks towards debt waiver scheme

The government is likely to release Rs 10,000 crore to banks and financial institutions as part of compensation for writing off loans

under the farm-debt waiver scheme.

"The Finance Ministry is considering to release Rs 10,000 crore to lending institutions in a month or so," official sources said.

This would be over and above Rs 5,000 crore which was given earlier this fiscal to the banks and financial institutions towrads the debt waiver scheme.

The government had announced that it would pay Rs 15,000 crore to the lenders during the current fiscal.

The debt waiver scheme, announced by the government in 2008-09 Budget, was implemented by June 30, 2008, entailed a burden of Rs 71,000 crore on banks and financial institutions which the government promised to reimburse in stages.

During 2008-09, the government gave a total of Rs 25,000 crore to lending institutions as compensation towards the the Agricultural Debt Waiver and Debt Relief Scheme.

Under the debt waiver and relief package, for small and marginal farmers (with holdings up to 2 hectare) there was a complete waiver of all loans due on December 31, 2007, and which remained unpaid until February 29, 2008.


RIL, IGL to sign gas supply pact; gas priced at $4.2 per mBtu


Reliance Industries is likely to sign tomorrow a gas sale contract with Indraprastha Gas Ltd that would use the supplies from RIL's
eastern offshore gas fields for vending CNG to automobiles and piped gas to kitchens in the national capital.

RIL is likely to sign the Gas Sales and Purchase Agreement (GSPA) with IGL - the sole supplier of CNG and piped gas in Delhi - for supply of 0.308 million standard cubic meters per day of its KG-D6 gas, industry sources said.

Government has allocated over 0.83 mmscmd gas from KG-D6 for seven city gas projects at a price of $4.2 per million British thermal unit.

Besides IGL, Mahanagar Gas Ltd that retails CNG in Mumbai has been allocated 0.37 mmscmd and Hindustan Petroleum 0.49 mmscmd for its CNG operations in Ahmedabad, sources said.

State gas utility GAIL's subsidiaries Avantika Gas Ltd has been given 0.012 mmscmd for Indore and 0.0012 mmscmd for Ujjain, Green Gas Ltd 0.15 mmscmd and Sabarmati Gas Ltd 0.077 mmscmd.

RIL is currently producing 36 mmscmd gas from KG-D6, half of which goes to power plants. The firm has the capacity to produce 60 mmscmd but is constrained to produce less as the government is yet to identify customers for buying gas beyond the initial 40 mmscmd, allocated primarily to fertilizer and power producers in accordance with the Gas Utilization Policy.


Deora explains OilMin stand on gas row to PM


Oil Minister Murli Deora on Wednesday called on the Prime Minister to explain his ministry's stand on the gas dispute between the

Ambani brothers and how their family pact could affect government's right to put the national resource to judicious use.

Deora met Prime Minister for about half an hour and is believed to have explained in detail the part of the demerger agreement - which split the Dhirubhai Ambani empire between brothers Mukesh and Anil - that sought to appropriate the gas found in Reliance Industries' KG-D6 and other fields between the firms run by them.

Sources in know of the development said the minister, who has been under fire from the Anil Ambani camp for allegedly siding with the elder brother on the issue, explained how such agreements were in violation of the Production Sharing Contract and would set a wrong precedent for others.

Deora, they said, told Singh that his ministry had to move a Special Leave Petition in the Supreme Court as the Bombay High Court had given effect to the family MoU and given the private agreement precedence over government's right to formulate Gas Utilisation Policy under the PSC.

The Bombay High Court had on June 15 asked RIL to supply more than a third of peak output from KG-D6 fields to Anil Ambani Group's Reliance Natural Resources Ltd at $2.34 per million British thermal unit, a rate 44 per cent lower than government approved price for the fuel from the fields.


Just see these reports published by ECONOMIC Times:

Govt to roll out Rs 225k cr plan to house slum dwellers

12 Aug 2009, 0121 hrs IST, Sanjeev Choudhary & Bhanu Pande, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: In its most ambitious bid ever to house 6-crore slum dwellers and realise the vision of a slum-free India, the government is rolling
Dividends
out a massive plan to build 50-lakh dwelling units in five years across 400 towns and cities. The programme could free up thousands of acres of valuable government land across the country and generate crores worth of business for real estate developers.

The ministry of housing and urban poverty alleviation has sought an allocation of Rs 225,000 crore, over one-fifth of the total budget expenditure for the current fiscal, for the entire scheme, according to a senior ministry official involved with the preparation of the proposal that has been sent to the Planning Commission.

The programme, named Rajiv Awas Yojana, draws from the experience of the government in housing the poor in urban areas under the ongoing Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), but is different as it is the first sincere attempt to rid India of slums.

The government is holding consultations with all stakeholders, including state governments, municipalities, urban planners, NGOs and slumdweller communities. At least 23 of the 25 states have given in-principle consent for the programme, said the official.


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Proliferation of slums has had an adverse impact on the GDP growth for years. Slumdwellers are characterised by low productivity and susceptible to poor health and criminal activities. The government believes that while better housing facilities will address those social challenges, it will also have a multiplier effect and serve as an economic stimulus. Most importantly, it will perpetuate the UPA government's inclusive agenda, buttressing its vote bank.

The programme involves a model legislation at the Centre, followed by separate legislations in states, which would give slum dwellers property right (as different from land rights). Slumdwellers are mostly squatters on government or private land, but this legislation will make them rightful owner of homes on such land. As per the government data, slums occupy as much as 4% of urban India, of which 78% belongs to the state and central government.

Since a large chunk of the government land belongs to the Centre, the government is planning to set up an inter-ministerial panel to thrash out the modalities of making part of the land available for housing slum dwellers. The panel would have representatives from the ministry of railways, defence, commerce & industry, shipping and road transport.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/Economy/Policy/Govt-to-roll-out-Rs-225k-cr-plan-to-house-slum-dwellers-/articleshow/4883476.cms

Food bill first drought casualty


12 Aug 2009, 0238 hrs IST, Devesh Kumar, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: With the country's northern and eastern regions facing the spectre of a drought, the Manmohan Singh government's ambitious plans of

providing food security to all has taken a hit, at least for the time being. The proposed National Food Security Bill, which had been included in the government's 100-day roadmap, has been put on the backburner.

Under the programme, the government was to provide 25 kgs of rice or wheat at Rs 2 per kg to all BPL families.
Government officials confirmed that the bill, which was being drafted by the agriculture ministry, had been put on hold, given the fact that the country was experiencing a deficient rainfall, which had affected the sowing of the kharif crops.

The below-par monsoon has upset the calculations of the Manmohan Singh government. The deficit in rainfall was expected to be around 30%, and, to the agriculture ministry's dismay, the sown area under paddy, the foremost among kharif crops, was lower than last year.

Latest estimates showed a decrease of six million hectares in paddy-sowing in the rain-fed states — a fact which was admitted as much by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday.

The moisture factor was also causing concern, and there were expectations that paddy production would also take a knock. A low paddy production would be accompanied by a low procurement, causing a severe strain on the country's buffer stocks.

In his reply to the discussion the price situation on the concluding day of the budget session, agriculture minister Sharad Pawar had sought to assuage the feelings of the Lok Sabha members, assuring that the government had enough rice and wheat in its stocks to meet the people's requirements for the next 13 months. The government has now set its sight on delayed rainfall for a normal rabi season.

``But even if that too fails to gather momentum, then we've grim times ahead,'' a senior food ministry official told ET.

That being the case, the Manmohan Singh government's plans to roll out the food security programme in this year itself has received a setback. ``The conditions are not such to enable us to embark on such a grandiose adventure at this juncture,'' senior government officials pointed out.

And Reuter reports:

Mid-income Indians will need 2 mn homes by 2011: Report

12 Aug 2009, 0404 hrs IST, REUTERS

MUMBAI: Middle income Indians will need more than 2 million homes by 2011 across the large cities, a property consultant report said, pegging the

affordable housing market at Rs 3,30,000 crore.

Households with an annual income between Rs 3 lakh and Rs 10 lakh in Mumbai, the National Capital Region, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Pune will need 1.65 billion sq ft of space by then, the report by Knight Frank Research said.

Taking an average price of Rs 2,000 a sq ft, this values the affordable housing market at $68 billion, they added. The survey took a sample size of 1,400 households across the seven cities.

The respondents were mostly tenants, without tenancy rights under the rent control act, and had a strong intention to buy a house within the next two years, the report said.

Indian developers have been launching lower-margin, middle-income projects, after being hit by the global credit crunch, to draw revenue from the largely uncatered segment.

L&T Infotech partners with Micro Focus to set up CoE
10 Aug 2009, 1456 hrs IST, PTI


MUMBAI: L&T Infotech has partnered with Micro Focus to set up a Center of Excellence (CoE) in

Mumbai.

The CoE will expand and accelerate the delivery of products and solutions to its customers globally. It will help address new lines of business around application modernisation and migration, and enhance skill development around Micro Focus products, a press release issued here on Monday said.

The CoE will use the Micro Focus modernisation and migration platform suite of products to manage and modernise the clients application portfolio and will be used to showcase solutions and practices to existing customers as well as prospects.

"We are poised to expand our services around Micro Focus technologies and to build intellectual property on top of this flexible and open platform," L&T Infotech's Chief Executive Officer, Sudip Banerjee, said in the release.

The partnership will enable L&T Infotech to add immense value, help expedite the delivery of services and provide innovative solutions to its customers.

"The Micro Focus platform provides best-in-class functionality for application transformation while enabling market leaders like L&T Infotech to create unique accelerators that address CIOs' top priorities," Micro Focus's CEO, Stephen Kelly, said.

Indian cos' earnings to move up: JPMorgan

12 Aug 2009, 1937 hrs IST, REUTERS

MUMBAI: JPMorgan expects Indian corporate earnings to pick up pace in the second half of 2009/10 even though weak monsoon was a worry as the

country depends on the rains for irrigating the farms.

"There will be an impact. But the extent and exact time of the impact is too early to judge," said Harshad Patwardhan, who helps manage about $4.5 billion in Indian shares for the US money manager.

"We also have to see what the government does to counter the bad impact of monsoon," he told Reuters on the sidelines of a news conference.

India's monsoon rainfall deficit widened to 29 per cent on Aug. 10, increasing the risk of crop damage, but its impact on the country's economy was offset by high growth in the June industrial output due to buoyant consumer demand.

Patwardhan said a 12 per cent year-on-year earnings growth for the benchmark stock index in June quarter was mainly due to cost cuts.

"But we do expect, based on our interactions with the corporates, that second half onwards things should start picking up," he said.

June industrial output expanded 7.8 per cent, its fastest pace in 16 months, beating forecasts by a wide margin as higher salaries of government employees and stimulus spending boosted consumer demand, data showed on Wednesday.

Patwardhan said earnings could show a growth of up to 5 per cent in 2009/10 based on current forecasts but he expected an upgrade in the second half of the fiscal year ending March and a much faster growth in 2010/11 as economic activities pick up.

"FY11 clearly will be a year where we can see a significant growth and there I believe that we may be surprised positively," he said.

India is best-positioned economy in the region: Chetan Ahya, Morgan Stanley

12 Aug 2009, 0125 hrs IST, Andy Mukherjee, ET Now

Chetan Ahya, Morgan Stanley economist for India and South-East Asia, talks to ET NOW on the mounting risks of another property bubble in Asia
Chetan Ahya
Chetan Ahya, Economist, India and South-East Asia, Morgan Stanley
and discusses outlook for growth and inflation in the Indian economy, which, he says, will do relatively better than its Asian peers in withstanding anaemic export demand.

What are Asian economies doing to supplant the US consumer as the region's primary growth engine?

Right now you see the policy makers responding to the cyclical challenge. They aren't yet embarking, in a big way, upon the structural measures needed to boost domestic demand. If you compare this with Japan in the mid-'80s, we saw something similar. Japan responded in the same way as we're doing now. They cut policy rates aggressively, lifting their domestic demand.

But they didn't address the structural issue, so they got the side effect of an asset bubble. Coming back to the Asian situation today, we've widened our fiscal deficit; we've cut our policy rates and interest rates - interest rates are actually at an unusually low level in Asia. And we're going to get a boost in domestic demand cyclically. But we're also beginning to see the initial signs of asset prices moving towards the bubble zone.

So where is all this excess liquidity going? Into property?

Correct. It is beginning to go into property. Right now, I don't think we can say we are in that bubble stage. But we'll see whether the policy makers control this or let this go on. It's not easy to stop bubbles from growing because there is always some confusion between which part of the asset-price expansion is fundamentally driven and which part is driven by excesses.

Why is this money that is sloshing about not going into new factories?

As I mentioned, exports are doing very badly. So at this point you already have low-capacity utilisation. Money will not go into manufacturing investments. That's something we saw in Japan, too, in the '80s.

You said Asian governments have not really begun to address structural impediments to domestic demand. Give us some examples of what these impediments are.

The most important one is the current-account surplus in countries that need to lift their private consumption. And that's really the North Asian countries such as China and Taiwan. For this to happen, you need to ensure that you have the social security systems that give the confidence to households to spend more. And while they can begin it now, these changes take 4-5 years.

And so the fact that they didn't begin some time ago is going to be a significant challenge to get this done quickly. At this point of time, they have just taken the first steps. And they are very far away from that stage where households will start increasing consumption on a structural basis.

Don't panic, 55 percent H1N1 cases already cured: Experts

12 Aug 2009, 1200 hrs IST, IANS

NEW DELHI: Don't panic, be careful. That's the advice from health experts who point out that the H1N1 influenza is milder than the seasonal flu

and that 55 percent of the more than 1,000 cases in the country have already been cured and discharged from hospitals.

India has so far has reported 1,079 swine flu cases and 12 deaths. While 589 have been discharged, the others are still undergoing treatment in various government hospitals in the country.

"The swine flu virus is a mild strain and, in fact, is less virulent than the seasonal flu, which causes more deaths... We have treatment for it, which is Tamiflu. It is a curable disease, not an incurable one," said Health Secretary Naresh Dayal.

According to Randeep Guleria, head of medicine at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi, worldwide about 95 percent of those hospitalised have been discharged.

"Global data shows that less than six percent of those affected needed hospitalisation, while one third (of those in hospital) needed ICU care. However, those who have recovered from the flu are not immune to the infection and have to take care as others. But the next time they get the virus, it would be a mild one," Guleria said.

Officials also reassure those panicking at the rapid spread of the disease that an indigenous vaccine to tackle the viral disease is on its way.

"The work to develop an indigenous vaccine and testing kit is also going on at a fast pace and we will have a vaccine by year-end when we are expecting a more virulent strain of flu to be active," said M. Katoch, secretary in the department of health research.

A total of 4.6 million people have been screened for swine flu across the country in the past three-and-a-half months; of these 5,000 people were tested for the flu.

The central government has spent over Rs.30 million (Rs.3 crore) for testing - 1,079 positive cases and 3,921 negative.

The swine flu testing kits are imported from a US company and each positive test costs Rs.10,000 while a negative test costs Rs.5,000, the government says.

Unemployment jumps 220,000 to 2.4m

Jobless rate climbs to 7.8% of the workforce

unemployment on the rise

Economists predict that youth unemployment will reach 1 million this autumn as a new crop of school and college leavers flood into the jobs market. Photograph: Christopher Thomond

Unemployment in Britain jumped by 220,000 in the three months to June to 2.435 million, official data showed today, the highest level since 1995.

The Office for National Statistics said that the jobless rate was now 7.8% of the workforce.

The figures also showed a huge 271,000 drop in the number of people in work – the biggest fall since records began in 1971 – although there was a similar fall in the February to April period this year.

There was a rise of more than 50,000 in the number of the under-25s without work to a total of 928,000, fuelling fears of a "lost generation" of jobless. The Prince's Trust said that around half of these were able to claim unemployment benefit, which was now costing the government £3.4m a day.

"But this is just the start of a long and downward spiral, which all too often leads to crime, homelessness or worse. Only by stopping young people falling out of the system can we rescue this lost potential and save the economy billions each year," said Martina Milburn, the charity's chief executive.

The Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokesman, Steve Webb, added: "Young people should be getting intensive support as soon as they sign on instead of having to wait a year for a guarantee of a job or training place. With vacancies at a record low, it is vital that we prevent today's school and university leavers from becoming a lost generation of long-term unemployed."

The ONS also reported a relatively small rise of 25,000 in the number of people claiming jobseeker's allowance. Under that measure there are now 1.58 million people claiming benefit, equivalent to 4.9% of the workforce, which is the highest rate since October 1997.

There is now widespread suspicion among experts that the claimant count figures are not representing the true state of joblessness since many unemployed people are unable to claim benefit. Yesterday the Department for Work and Pensions announced an inquiry into the recent divergence between the two measures of unemployment.

'Unacceptable' and 'ghastly'

Ahead of the figures, the business secretary, Lord Mandelson, admitted this morning that unemployment levels were "unacceptable", although he insisted that even more people would be out of work if the Tories had been in power during the recession.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mandelson said: "One thing I and the government know is that any such level of unemployment is unacceptable.

"The question is, what is the government doing about it, and what would be the level of unemployment if the government had not intervened in the economy in the way in which we have?"

He said the government was spending £5bn on getting people back to work while the Conservatives wanted to cut state investment in the economy by a similar amount.

TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said: "Today's figures show we are still some way off recovery. With over one in six young people out of work, unemployment is already at crisis level. The government must do more to get people back into work, otherwise we risk losing another generation of young people to mass unemployment."

Describing the figures as "ghastly," Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight said he suspected the International Labour Organisation (ILO) measure of unemployment "is painting a truer picture of the current state of the labour market" than the much narrower claimant count measure.

"In particular, over the summer months, there are likely to be a lot of students who have just left college or school and cannot get a job, thereby going straight into unemployment," Archer said. "These do not show up on the claimant count data as they are not eligible for benefits. Indeed, youth unemployment is already a major source of concern."

The ILO data shows that the employment rate of 16 and 17-year-olds dropped to 28.6% in April-June from 34% a year earlier, while the rate for people aged 18 to 24 dropped to 59.8% from 64.1%.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/aug/12/unemployment-jobless-rise


Bill Clinton's shadow darkens Hillary's mood in Congo

Andrew Clark in New York
The Guardian, Tuesday 11 August 2009

If you want my opinion, I will tell you my opinion. I am not going to be channelling my husband." Link to this video

No matter where she goes, it seems that Hillary Clinton cannot quite escape the international shadow cast by her husband.

Usually polished in public, the US secretary of state's calm demeanour momentarily cracked yesterday when a Congolese student asked her about Bill Clinton's view on a foreign policy issue. "My husband is not secretary of state," Clinton snapped. "I am."

The encounter, in the Congolese capital, Kinshasa, came during an 11-day whistle-stop tour of Africa. The male student had asked her what "Mr Clinton" thought about a controversial $9bn deal between Congo and China, in which the African country has traded rights to develop its rich copper reserves for help in building roads, railways and schools.

"You want me to tell you what my husband thinks?" Clinton asked sharply. "If you want my opinion, I will tell you my opinion. I am not going to be channelling my husband."

The exchange came at a sensitive time for Clinton, whose African trip has been somewhat overshadowed by her husband's humanitarian mission to rescue two US journalists held by Kim Jong-il's regime in North Korea last week. The former US president was lauded for his success in securing their freedom in a trip to North Korea which the Obama administration says was carried out independently.

After keeping a low profile for a time after she fractured her elbow in a fall two months ago, the US secretary of state embarked on visits to India and Thailand in July, followed by her tour of seven African states, in a gruelling return to the frontline of globe-trotting diplomacy. She took in a Masai dance display in Kenya before travelling to meet South Africa's president, Jacob Zuma, on Saturday with a promise to re-energise bilateral relations with the US.

But throughout her visit, she has been peppered with questions about her husband's North Korean visit. She told CNN on Sunday that his trip was "not in any way a government mission". When asked what he had told her about North Korea, she replied that she had a long-held policy of not disclosing the content of her private conversations with her husband.

Commentators in the US have raised questions over her role, given Barack Obama's mission to revamp America's reputation overseas. In an article last month, the founder of the online Daily Beast, Tina Brown, described her as "invisible", pointing out that she was missing from Obama's recent trip to meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow, and that Vice-President Joe Biden has taken the lead on policy in Afghanistan.

• This article was amended on 11 August 2009, to clarify that it is the position of the US administration that Bill Clinton's trip to North Korea was undertaken independently of the administration.


Swine flu: TV presenter's daughter 'almost died' after taking Tamiflu

GMTV star Andrew Castle confronts health secretary, Andy Burnham, over policy of giving drug to children

GMTV: Penny Smith and Andrew Castle

Andrew Castle, right, with co-presenter Penny Smith confronted the health secretary, Andy Burnham, over giving Tamilflu to children during the swine flu pandemic.

The health secretary, Andy Burnham, today defended giving the antiviral drug Tamiflu to children for swine flu as TV presenter Andrew Castle said his daughter "almost died" after taking it.

Burnham was confronted by Castle on GMTV after researchers said the antiviral drug's benefits did not outweigh its side-effects during the flu pandemic.

Castle said his older daughter, Georgina, had a "respiratory collapse" and "suffered very heavily" after being "just handed" the drug without a proper diagnosis.

The presenter said: "I can tell you that my child – who was not diagnosed at all – she had asthma, she took Tamiflu and almost died."

Burnham sympathised with Castle, saying it must have been "very worrying", but maintained that advice to parents to treat swine flu with Tamiflu remained unchanged.

The MP said Georgina would have been given Tamiflu during the earlier "containment" phase of swine flu.

He stressed that the research dealt with seasonal flu, not swine flu: "It's very much a safety-first approach."

Given that swine flu had a "disproportionate effect" on children, the minister maintained that the antiviral drug was "our only line of defence".

Some 300,000 people in England, including children and adults, have received Tamiflu through the government's National Pandemic Flu Service for England.

But yesterday, Oxford University researchers said children should not be given the antiviral drug to combat swine flu. They urged the Department of Health to rethink its policy on giving the drug to under-12s during the current pandemic.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), warned that Tamiflu could cause vomiting, which could lead to dehydration and the need for hospital treatment.

The researchers said children should not be given the drug if they had a mild form of the illness, although they urged parents and GPs to remain vigilant for signs of complications.

Parents of children with a compromised immune system or a condition such as cystic fibrosis should discuss the harms and benefits with their GP, they said.

But overall, the researchers said, children who were otherwise healthy could suffer more harm than benefit from taking Tamiflu or another antiviral, Relenza.

The researchers also found that using antivirals as a preventative measure had little effect – reducing transmission of flu by 8%.

The study was carried out in April and May, before the government decided to stop using Tamiflu preventatively.

Only those with suspected or confirmed swine flu were now getting the drug and are being urged to get access to Tamiflu through the pandemic flu service, which is accessed online or via a telephone helpline.

A Department of Health spokesman yesterday dismissed the researchers' claims that their findings would also apply to swine flu.

"The BMJ review is based on seasonal flu and not swine flu," he said.

"As the authors note, the extent to which the findings can be applied to the current pandemic is questionable – after all, we already know that swine flu behaves differently to seasonal flu, and past pandemics have hit younger people hardest."

Georgina, 16, was given Tamiflu when five pupils at Alleyn's school in south London were diagnosed with the illness in May.

"We saw a respiratory collapse through [the drug] and it almost cost my older child her life," her father said on GMTV.

"Nobody checked that she had swine flu beforehand. The Health Protection Agency just handed it out … and a lot of kids suffered in the school very heavily."

He went on: "The doctor's surgery wouldn't take her. The doctor said, 'No, we can't take her to A&E.'

"So she's just on the floor having this nightmare of a situation. A lot of people are in this situation. They don't know what to do."

Burnham told the presenter: "It must have been a very worrying situation for you, but that was in a very different phase of the illness when we were seeing the scenes from Mexico and we were in what we call the containment phase, where we were trying to isolate every case and then give Tamiflu to those around those cases.

"We've got to keep things in proportion and people shouldn't worry unnecessarily. People shouldn't take Tamiflu unless they have got swine flu."

Burnham said his message to parents was that they should not be worried if their child was taking Tamiflu for swine flu."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/11/swine-flu-tamiflu-andrew-castle


Swine flu message to NRIs: Do remit, but do not visit

12 Aug 2009, 2014 hrs IST, Joe A Scaria, ET Bureau

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: No one is yet telling NRI family members not to come home this holiday season. That would be cruel to the overseas
breadwinners who keep the fires burning back home.

But with the spread of the swine flu, apparently being carried by NRIs in significant numbers, the message to them could well be: Do remit, but do not visit.

For a state like Kerala that is a beneficiary of copious amounts of remittances, it is a piquant situation. It happens to be school vacation time in many countries where Keralites abound, like the Middle East and the UK, and the expats are flowing into the state for their annual holiday break. And the first A(H1N1)-related casualty in the state happens to be a youth who had until recently been in the Gulf.

The medical fraternity has differing viewpoints on the issue, but what is apparent is that a significant number of visiting NRIs are suffering from flu. Half a dozen people arriving at the Cochin International Airport on Tuesday from destinations including Singapore, Dubai and Muscat were quarantined while NRIs from other countries including the US are in-patients in different hospitals across the state.

NRIs being affected should be a matter of serious concern for Kerala, considering their financial contribution to the state. Total outstandings in Kerala's commercial banks had reached a historic high of Rs 37,019 crore at the end of March 2009, reflecting a 19% increase over the Rs 29,889 crore in NRI accounts at the end of March 2008.

According to Anup Warrier, who heads the infectious diseases department at the Kerala Institute of Medical Sciences here, the government of India directive to avoid unnecessary travel is particularly valid for Kerala. "Recreational and entertainment-related travel should be curbed, because the possibility of being exposed to the disease gets higher as the number of affected persons increases", Dr Warrier told ET.


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Mathew Parakkal, a former professor of medicine, said it was not practical to prevent NRIs from visiting their near and dear ones, adding that life could carry on with the necessary precautions. He, however, warned that the possibility of the spread of the disease was considerably higher in our country, considering the "high density of population in the metros, poor sanitary conditions and low education levels".

"Keralites are a mobile people, both internally and overseas. They are the beneficiaries of remittances, and for that reason should accept developments like a spread of communicable diseases that come through such wide travel", S Irudayarajan, a specialist in migration studies at the Centre for Development Studies here told ET.

Remittances have been so buoyant in recent years that any setback to NRIs can reflect significantly on home budgets in Kerala. According to Y Sudhir Kumar Shetty, COO for global operations of the UAE Exchange, the period 2004-06 was one of exceptional growth when there was a 34% year-on-year growth in remittances. That has dropped to about 22-25%, which are also considered healthy levels.

NRI deposits in Kerala banks

March 2009: Rs 37,019 crore

December 2008: Rs 34,649 crore

June 2008: Rs 31,865 crore

March 2008: Rs 29,889 crore

Airtel's $500m outsourcing deal up for grabs

12 Aug 2009, 1300 hrs IST, Joji Thomas Philip, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: India's largest telco Bharti Airtel will outsource the management and maintenance of its 80,000 km-plus inter-city optic fibre cable
network in a deal estimated at around $500 million over a five-year period, two executives familiar with the development said.

Bharti has sounded out several telecom equipment majors about the contract that will be issued soon, said an executive privy to the development. The deal is in line with the company's policy of outsourcing non-core activities to save costs and become a telecom marketing company.

Inter-city optic fibre cables, or transmission network in telecom industry parlance, carry voice (STD) and data (internet) traffic across the country. In revenue terms, Bharti is the largest carrier of voice and data traffic across the country and many of the smaller telcos use Airtel's inter-city network for carrying their STD calls.

Bharti has made outsourcing the cornerstone of its business strategy, and has signed multibillion dollar contracts with network vendors such as Ericsson, Nokia and Siemens, which build, operate and manage its mobile network.


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It pioneered the network outsourcing model in 2004 by awarding contracts to Ericsson and Siemens (which later merged with Nokia Networks) and this business model has now been replicated by over 100 operators globally. Bharti was also the first to outsource its IT requirements when it by awarded a 10-year $750-million contract to IBM, which is now worth $2.5 billion. Another billiondollar pact exists with six BPOs, which collectively handle Bharti's customer services for a 10-year period.

The Alcatel-Lucent-Bharti JV is the front runner to manage and maintain the telco's inter-city networks, said another industry executive aware of the development. In April 2009, Bharti Airtel entered into a joint venture with Franco-American telecom gearmaker Alcatel-Lucent to manage its landline and broadband business.

Bharti is the minority partner in the 26:74 joint venture , and is paying the JV company about $500 million over a five-year period for managing its landline and broadband business in about 100 cities for the next five years.

When contacted, executives in Alcatel-Lucent declined to comment on the company's chances to bag yet another deal from Bharti. Confirming that Bharti was looking at outsourcing management and maintenance of its inter-city optic fibre cables, an executive from the company said: "The process is only at the initial stage and it may be a while before we award the contracts. As a company, we are always looking at ways to improve our offerings and being in greater efficiency. Outsourcing of transmission networks is part of this process."

But a Bharti spokesman declined to comment on what he termed as market speculation. "Bharti Airtel always evaluates opportunities to deliver better services to its customers in a more efficient way," he said.

Are information technology's glory days gone?

10 Aug 2009, 1803 hrs IST, New York Times
If Thomas M. Siebel can accurately see the future, computer science students with the entrepreneurial gene may want to look for a different
major. And investors who think that information technology is a sector that will produce outsized returns should wake up.

In Siebel's view, IT is a mature industry that will grow no faster than the larger economy. He contends that its glory days are past – long past, having ended in 2000.

I believe that Siebel may well be wrong. But his own illustrious career in IT makes his opinions a matter of uncommon interest.

Earning both a master's degree in computer science and an MBA at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he was an executive at Oracle from 1984 to 1990. In 1993, he founded Siebel Systems, which sells software for tracking customers and sales prospects; the company was acquired in 2006 by Oracle, which paid almost $6 billion. In Siebel's self-deprecating narrative, he was simply standing in the right place at the right time.

Addressing Stanford students in February as a guest of the engineering school, Siebel called attention to 20 sweet years, from 1980 to 2000, when, he said, worldwide IT spending grew at a compounded annual growth rate of 17 percent. "All you had to do was show up and not goof it up," he said. "All ships were rising."


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Since 2000, however, that rate has averaged only 3 percent, he said. His explanation for the sharp decline is that "the promise of the post-industrial society has been realized."

No new technological advances, he believes, would impel IT customers to replace the computer technology they already had: "I would suggest to you that most of what's going on today is not very exciting."

In his view, far larger opportunities are to be found in businesses that address needs in food, water, health care and energy. Though Silicon Valley was "where the action was" when he finished graduate school, he says, "if I were graduating today, I would get on a boat and I would get off in Shanghai."

When I called him last month to discuss his provocative arguments, he was disarmingly modest. "I'm just an old has-been, I don't present myself as an expert in this or any other area," he said.

The huge difference in growth rates, pre- and post-2000, may seem so stark as to leave no room for an alternative view of IT's prospects.

But the recent drop is not as steep as it seems at first. I asked Shane Greenstein, an economist at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management who has written extensively about the computer industry, to take a look at the raw data upon which those numbers were supposedly based: the annual IT spending estimates published by IDC.

Paddy sown, but will it be harvested?

11 Aug 2009, 1800 hrs IST, TNN

For weeks, Balbir Singh, the sarpanch of Janetpur village near Chandigarh , prayed for rain to sow his paddy crop. Now, like thousands of other

farmers in the state, Balbir finds that sustaining the crop is more difficult and prohibitive.

Input costs are spiralling and the farmer has calculated his to be Rs 5,000 extra on every bigha of land. "Even after this, there is no guarantee that I would be able to save my crop," he says.

Balbir owns about 20 acres of land and can be described as a farmer of modest means. But scanty rains have left this young man more anxious than marginal farmers — like fellow villagers Jaswinder Singh and Prakash Singh — who have abandoned their dry fields and now work as labourers in Dera Bassi town near Chandigarh.

"Nearly 100 out of the 500 acres in my village have been left unsown," says Balbir. "We have to bore up to 600 feet to reach a comfortable level of underground water. This time the bores had to be dug 50ft deeper."

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