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Yearly Archives: 2019

Home 2019

Liberalising Tenancy or Grabbing Land of the Poor?

  • November 4, 2019
  • Vikas Rawal and Vaishali Bansal
  • Food and Agriculture, Poverty
  • 0 Comments

The State in India, barring the Left-led governments, has never been committed to implementing redistributive land reforms and securing rights of tenants. After 1991, when India adopted the policies of liberalisation and globalisation, the government stopped paying even the lip…

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A Dangerous Agreement to Sign

  • November 4, 2019
  • Prabhat Patnaik
  • Employment, Food and Agriculture, Trade and balance of payments
  • 0 Comments

On October 24-25, there were widespread peasant protests all over the country against the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) involving sixteen nations which India is currently negotiating. As negotiations near completion, such protests are escalating, with the All India Kisan…

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The Liquidity Conundrum

  • November 1, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Monetary Policy
  • 0 Comments

A common refrain in assessments of India’s current economic predicament is that the economy is performing below potential because of a lack of ‘liquidity’. Often, this is merely a means of stating that an inadequacy of credit flow is choking…

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RCEP and Make in India dreams

  • October 31, 2019
  • Smitha Francis
  • Macroeconomics, Trade and balance of payments
  • 0 Comments

The stated objective of the regional comprehensive economic partnership (RCEP) agreement under negotiation is to integrate ASEAN countries and its bilateral free trade partners — Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea— into a mega regional free trade…

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RCEP and India’s ICT Import Dependence: What should be our priorities?

  • October 31, 2019
  • Smitha Francis and Murali Kallummal
  • Industry, Trade and balance of payments
  • 0 Comments

Given that ASEAN, South Korea and Japan are already India’s FTA partners, the ongoing Regional Comprehensive Economic Cooperation (RCEP) negotiations will primarily add China as well as Australia and New Zealand as new free trade partners for India. Australia and…

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India’s Rank on the Global Hunger Index

  • October 28, 2019
  • Prabhat Patnaik
  • Development Economics, Political Economy, Poverty
  • 0 Comments

The news that India’s rank in 2019 according to the Global Hunger Index (GHI) was 102nd among the 117 countries for whom this index was calculated (it is not calculated for countries where hunger is not a problem), instead of…

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Banking Jitters

  • October 18, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

In an unusual and ill-advised move, the Reserve Bank of India issued a brief ‘clarification’ on October 1st which said: “There are rumours in some locations about certain banks including cooperative banks, resulting in anxiety among the depositors. RBI would…

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The World Economy in Decline

  • October 18, 2019
  • Prabhat Patnaik
  • Monetary Policy, World Economy
  • 0 Comments

The European Central Bank last month pushed its benchmark interest rate to minus 0.5 per cent, which means that if it gives a loan of 100 euros then it would be paid back only 99.5 euros at the expiry of…

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Market Jitters that carry a Message

  • October 15, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Monetary Policy
  • 0 Comments

Mid-September saw some unusual developments in US money markets, which gave market players and monetary authorities the jitters. Over three days, a key short term interest rate rose sharpy to reach levels last touched about a decade ago, when the…

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A Tax Policy that could work

  • October 14, 2019
  • Jayati Ghosh
  • Finance, Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

The Indian government should now be desperate to raise more tax revenues. It missed its tax targets massively in the last fiscal year, largely because of poor goods and services tax (GST) collections. Its declared budgetary target for the current…

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