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Opinion/Editorials |
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How close is the next crisis? -
Niranjan Rajadhyaksha, Mint
A week after Reserve Bank of India governor D. Subbarao took almost everyone by surprise by cutting the key monetary policy rate by 50 basis points (bps), the bond market has hardly budged. On Tuesday afternoon, the benchmark 10-year bond was trading at around 15 basis points higher than its level the day before the policy announcement. The emerging consensus is that the Indian central bank does not have much firepower left in its armoury, perhaps another couple of 25 bps cuts at best.
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Can a caged parrot sing? -
Bharat Karnad, NewIndianExpress
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This way to Chindia -
Hu Shisheng, Outlook India
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It's 1973 all over again -
Victor Davis Hanson, Tribune Media Services
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For online free speech -
Mint
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Optimistic foreigners -
TN Ninan, Business Standard
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Fallacy of political tourism in Pak -
Subramanian Swamy, Pioneer
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Our human rights deserve better -
Hindu
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Not another law -
Indian Express
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Why inter-ministerial group need to clear quadricycles' entry in India -
Economic Times
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When it is right to copy -
Apar Gupta, Indian Express
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Playing hardball with China -
Hardeep S Puri, Indian Express
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Why there is no point of ranking Indian universities -
Bibek Debroy, Economic Times
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Why corruption continues to be around despite the outcry against it -
Chetan Bhagat, Times of India
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Sino-Pak Alliance: Naval and Nuclear Cooperation -
C Raja Mohan, Indian Express
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Everybody knows the fight was fixed -
DNA
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The unreliable source -
Hartosh Singh Bal, Open
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Virtual nasties -
Matthew Parris, Deccan Chronicle
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India: Patent and precedents -
Amy Kazmin, Financial Express
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India: the superpower that wasn’t -
Sandipan Deb, Mint
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What underlies the reasonable new China? -
Ajai Shukla, Business Standard
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US immigration Bill - is there an opportunity in crisis? -
Ravi Venkatesan, Bus Std
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Politics of revenge -
Pioneer
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Fresh options -
Financial Express
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Is John Kerry pro- or anti-India? -
Tanvi Madan, Indian Express
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Food for thought -
Minhaz Merchant, Economic Times
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Verbatim |
Nothing epitomises Congress's oligarchic culture, hinging on a power cabal that centres in a ‘High Command', than disgraced former Union Minister for Law and Justice Ashwani Kumar's parting statement in his own defence while demitting office. “Whatever the PM and the party High Command thought fit, as a loyal foot soldier, I have done, and I am proud of the fact that I have been a loyal foot soldier of the party”. There is no word about his loyalty to the nation, which, for patriotic Indians, should have precedence over party, Prime Minister and high command. But not in the Congress's scheme of things, which, in the final reckoning, is a matter of perpetuating the Nehru-Gandhi family's hegemony.
Anuradha Dutt |
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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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