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Check out the speed. After charting out a high-octane growth curve, India Inc is changing gears and getting into a diversification mode, spotting the booming business domains. In fact, in an aggressive hunt for growth areas, many Indian companies of various sizes and scales have made a serious attempt to join the bandwagon and branch out to new businesses.
Friday, November 29, 2013
METRO AND MONORAIL: A BOON FOR PROPERTY MARKET IN MUMBAI SUBURBS
Thursday, November 28, 2013
India ready to block WTO deal at Bali
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Lodhas buy iconic London bldg for £300m
Mumbai: In one of the biggest real-estate deals this year, the Lodha Group has bought the iconic MacDonald House, a five-storey office-cum-home of the Canadian High Commission in London, for £300 million (around Rs 3,000 crore), giving it a toehold in the global real estate business.
It has a total floor area of 160,000 sq ft (gross internal area) and is built on a land area of 0.67 acres. Canada had bought the building from the US government in the 1960s. Lodha plans luxury homes on London plot Mumbai: The Lodha Group has bought the iconic Macdonald House in London. In February, the Canadian government had put on sale the palatial building, named after the country's first prime minister Sir John A MacDonald, to cash in on London's surging real estate market.
Industry sources said the deal was signed on Thursday after Lodha paid the entire bid amount, making it the group's first major property acquisition abroad. Four to five bidders from the Middle East and Asia were also in the fray for the property, whose reserve price was 250 million pounds.
International property consultants said the building is located off Grosvenor Square in Mayfair, one of the most desirable areas in London and prices here can reach up to 2,000 pounds a sq ft. "Lodha is planning to construct a highend luxury residential building here. The construction, however, will not start till next year as London planning authorities have not changed the use from commercial to residential,'' said consultants close to Lodha Group.
Abhishek Lodha, managing director of Lodha Group, did not respond to queries seeking comment while the Canadian Embassy could not be contacted.
Incidentally, this is the second property owned by a foreign government purchased by the Lodha Group. Last December, it bought Washington House, staff quarters of the US consulate on Altamount road in Mumbai, for Rs 342 crore.
Lodha's MacDonald House buy comes three years after Sahara India Pariwar in 2010 acquired the iconic Grosvenor House hotel in London for 470 million pounds. Sahara has put the hotel back on the block.
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Fresh policy set to boost cluster redevpt, extend it across Mumbai Govt Plans Incentives, May Help Acquire Land
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Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Net gain: India poised to beat US Internet Users To Grow To 243mn By June From Over 200mn Now, Says Study
Mumbai: Internet penetration in the country may not have crossed 16% of the population yet, but in absolute numbers this percentage works out to nearly 10 times the population of Australia.
By October, the nation had crossed the 200 million mark, says a report released by the Internet And Mobile Association of India (IAMAI) and IMRB. The report estimates 243 million internet users in the country by June 2014, overtaking the US as the world's second largest internet base after China. The US today has an estimated 207 million internet users, while China has 300 million. The 205 million internet users that the IAMAI reports for India are not all active users, or those who use the internet at least once a month.
"There is every reason to believe that they will turn into active users in the near future," IMAI associate vice-president Nilotpal Chakravarti said.
While Indians primarily use the internet for communication, largely in the form of email, social media is also an important driver of internet use here.
This facet of the IAMAI report can be corroborated with data from other sources such as Facebook, according to which India had 82 million monthly active users by June 30, the second largest geographical region for Facebook after the US and Canada. Facebook does not operate in China.
Penetration in the country is driven largely by mobile phones, with some of the cheapest and most basic handsets today offering access to the internet. The country has 110 million mobile internet users, of which 25 million are in rural parts.
The contribution of mobiles to internet penetration in rural parts is especially significant, with 70% of the active internet population in non-urban areas accessing the web via cellphones; this may have to do with the difficulty in accessing PCs.
It was found that 42% of rural internet users preferred local languages. The high prevalence of content in English is a hurdle for most of them.
College-goers remained the largest users of the internet in the country, followed by young men.
While the IMAI report paints an optimistic picture, a report by the Broadband Commission for Digital Development ranked India 145th in around 200 countries for the percentage of individuals using the internet.
But IMAI associate vicepresident Chakravarti said India's performance when it came to internet penetration was an achievement given the country's current infrastructure.
URBAN AND RURAL USAGE TRENDS
Mobile net has penetration of 65% among the 108 million urban active net users (as of June). In rural parts, 70% of active net population accesses it using mobiles
In rural parts, 42% of people prefer accessing internet only in local tongues
REASONS FOR GOING ONLINE
Of the active internet users surveyed, close to 90% used the internet primarily for online communication, largely email. It was found that 75% engaged in social networks and 69% used the internet for entertainment
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
NEW US LAW Immigration Bill will Decimate Indian IT Cos
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CM TO MEET PM, SEEK NOD FOR KEY PROJECTS
Chief minister Prithviraj Chavan and his colleagues in the state administration are meeting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Delhi on Wednesday to discuss crucial development projects and administrative decisions. People with knowledge of the agenda said Indu Mill land and Navi Mumbai airport would be top-priority issues and there might even be some concrete decisions to impress people ahead of the general election
Airport at Navi Mumbai | CM will seek final go-ahead for global tender process to appoint developers for Navi Mumbai airport and a decision on how much shareholding should be there for developer in project cost
Churchgate-Virar Elevated Rail Corridor
| Whether to go ahead with cash contract or with private partnership by offering more FSI is to be decided Agriculture | State is demanding a firm decision on restricting import and export of agricultural products such as sugar and onion to check hoarding by farmers and traders, which affects retail prices Coastline | A discussion will be held on Centre's draft proposal to extend coastline up to point where saline water streams flow on land instead of 1-km distance from coast. State leaders say this move will block development on land worth over Rs 35,000 crore in Navi Mumbai Indu Mill Land | Expedition of process of handing over land to state for Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar memorial will be sought. The state wants a decision before Ambedkar's death anniversary on December 6 to avoid wrath of his followers Shivaji Statue | Need directives from PM to various departments to give 45 different permissions required to build statue in sea near Raj BhavanCoastal Road | State is seeking in-principle nod so that final drawings can be made and submitted for permissions. Plan requires amendment in Environment Act
Saturday, November 9, 2013
The 90,000 crore Surprise New research argues that the public distribution system lifted 38 million people out of poverty in 2009-10. And it’s getting better. Don’t thank the UPA, though
In the vociferous debate around the food security bill, critics seemingly had evidence and history on their side. The public distribution system (PDS) has for long been seen in policy circles as a kind of budgetary black hole, sucking in enormous resources and giving back very little in return, in terms of poverty reduction or better nutrition. Critics charged that the implementation of the food bill, with its legal guarantee of minimum levels of food for a large mass of the population, would only lead to an increase in food subsidy, currently pegged at 90,000 crore for 2013-14. The conclusion: more taxpayer money will go down the drain.
Now new research argues that the population pulled out of poverty in the last decade, thanks to PDS, has actually increased sharply. The research, by Himanshu, an associate professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, and Abhijit Sen, member of the Planning Commission, is due to be published in the Economic and Political Weekly. In 1993-94, there would have been around 413 million poor, if there had been no PDS from which people could buy subsidised food. Of this number, around 10 million (2.4%) were lifted above the poverty line because of access to PDS. In 2004-05, following a shift to targeted PDS, that number had risen to 14 million out of 417 million — or 3.3%. But it was after 2004-05 that a sharp shift happened, with the number of poor falling to 402 million, despite it being a drought year, of which 38 million (10%) were lifted out of poverty due to PDS. And in 2011-12, preliminary results indicate that without any system of food transfers there would have been 330 million poor in the country. Because of PDS, the number of poor lifted out of poverty was 50 million (15%). About 30% of the reduction in the poverty rate between 2004-05 and 2009-10 was attributable to PDS, according to the paper.
And that's not even the whole story, since the food subsidy system also supports the midday meal scheme which accounted for another 17 million poor being lifted out of poverty in 2009-10.
Has PDS Changed?
Underlying these shifts is evidence from other surveys of a sharp shift in the nature and reach of PDS. In the late 1990s, the scope of PDS was narrowed sharply, with the introduction of the so-called targeted PDS, which created two categories of consumers — those below the poverty line who got grain at highly subsidized prices, and those above the poverty line who received grain at far less subsidized prices. This shift, in 1999 under the NDA government, led to a sharp drop in the coverage of PDS and a jump in the 'leakages' — the share of grain that was supposed to reach the intended beneficiaries but didn't — from the system.
But it was after 2004-05 that PDS reversed course. It was a policy reversal, effectively resulting in a more inclusive and broader system in a number of states, which was rarely officially acknowledged as such. It may be tempting to align this shift with the change in governments at the national level with the UPA coming to power, but the Congress-led government at the Centre had relatively little to do with this shift. As the authors point out, much of the effort at improving PDS was done by individual states. These included Tamil Nadu, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Bihar. "Such ownership and effort [by states] appears crucial," say the authors. "Its lack was one reason why PDS failed before 2004-05..." And interestingly, increase in the expenditure on the food subsidy and PDS system by both the Centre and states since 2003-04, as a share of GDP, has been entirely due to increased expenditure by states, not the Centre. The other big shift that actually led to a de facto broadening of PDS was a Supreme Court order in 2001 which required all states to implement the midday meal scheme.
Out of Poverty
In their study, the authors looked at data on families recorded in the large scale National Sample Surveys, who bought food from PDS in different years. They valued the amount of food bought from PDS at their market prices in those years. The difference between the subsidized price the families actually paid, and what they would have paid had they bought that food from the market amounts to a transfer of funds from the government to the poor. The authors then calculated the number of poor people who, because of such a transfer, ended up with a consumption level that was higher than the level which determined the poverty line. The authors found that 1.3% of the population was lifted above the poverty line as a result of such transfers in 1993-94, 2.6% in 2004-05 and 4.6% in 2009-10. "...increased food transfers accounted for 32% of reduction in the Tendulkar Head Count Ratio between 2004-05 and 2000-10," say the authors. The Head Count Ratio is the technical term for the poverty rate published by the Planning Commission, which was 22% in 2011-12, down from 29.8% in 2009-10 and 37.2% in 2004-05.
The authors acknowledge that 2009-10, being a drought year, could well be an anomaly, since high food prices would have forced many more families to be reliant on subsidised food from PDS, leading to a bounce in the number of people who benefitted from it. However, say the authors: "Since a vital role of PDS in food security is to cope with drought and high food price inflation, this is a matter that should be noted rather than played down when evaluating whether PDS is effective or not." Despite criticism of the National Food Security Act, it may have history and evidence on its side to a greater extent than usually believed.
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