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Business/Economy |
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Rupee breaches 55 barrier against dollar -
Times of India
Continuing its downward drift, the rupee crossed a new all-time closing low of 55 against the dollar, settling at 55.04. The trend persisted in the absence of any major flows despite intervention by the Reserve Bank of India. Dealers said that given the current inclination, the currency could slide to 56 to 57 levels. However, any depreciation beyond this level could trigger panic and lead to a currency crisis, which would force the central bank to come out with concerted efforts to support the rupee.
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Rating the ‘raters’ -
Ramnath Pradeep, Business Line
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Madhya Pradesh goes the Gujarat way for power -
Jyoti Mukul, Business Standard
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Crossholding in same telecom circle may go -
Surajeet Das Gupta & Aditi Phadnis, Business Standard
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The argumentative economists -
Mihir S Sharma, Business Standard
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How the Indian economy is losing competitiveness -
Niranjan Rajadhyaksha, Mint
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Private universities: Creating another entry barrier -
TV Mohandas Pai, FE
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Procurement plunge casts shadow over food Bill -
Sandip Das, Financial Express
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Drug pricing order hits few, helps many -
Financial Express
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After telecom licences and coal blocks, will bank licences be the next cash cow for the UPA? -
Mythili Bhusnurmath, Economic Times
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National Pension System subscribers earn double digit return in 2012-13 -
ET
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HSBC signals 14,000 job cuts in $3-bn savings plan -
Business Standard
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Empty malls reflect the hollowness of India story -
Ravi Teja Sharma & Vijaya Rathore, Economic Times
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Manufacturing: Getting to the 25% mark -
Nirvikar Singh, Financial Express
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Oil price collusion would be a Libor-scale scandal -
Kevin Allison, Business Standard
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Global firms bet on India's spending power -
Business Standard
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Perils of an ad hoc forex policy -
TB Kapali, Business Line
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Corus, Ranbaxy & the curse: Deals that happen in auction like atmosphere always go bad -
Brian Carvalho, Economic Times
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Dholera’s Rs70,000-crore cure for investment famine -
Sunil Jain, Financial Express
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The Internet destroyed the middle class -
Scott Timberg, Salon
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Tax evasion: Why did Sibal extend undue favours to Voda, asks AAP -
Danish Raza, FirstPost
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No buyers for FDI in multi-brand retail -
Arvind Singhal, Business Standard
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Inflation back in RBI's comfort zone -
Business Standard
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The food mountain: security or a liability? -
Renu Kohli, Mint
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Growth vs inflation control -
Ashima Goyal, Business Line
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That man from Rio -
Sanjaya Baru, Indian Express
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The UPA 2 government was conceived in corruption – and never really recovered from that taint. Right from the day the election results came in, the back-channel negotiations began for the reappointment of A Raja as Telecom Minister to advance the interests of certain telecom majors (in return for illegal gratification). It was an enterprise which set the stage for India’s biggest corruption scandal and virtually set the political tone for the rest of the four years. As subsequent exposes have established, Manmohan Singh and other key Ministers knew full well that mischief was afoot, but pointedly looked the other way. That was the beginning of the slide, and the UPA government in general – and Manmohan Singh in particular – was mortally wounded from that episode. But rather than press ahead with remedial action, the government slid further into the cesspool of corruption.
Venky Vembu |
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Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar - K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when. |
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