Crowded cities are rich because there is greater division of labour. The extent of the division of labour depends on the size of the market, wrote Sauvik Chakraverti in 2002.
With 20.2 percent of its total loans in default by the end of last year, Bangladesh had the weakest banking system in Asia. Despite reforms, it will take time to recover.
Bihar is blessed with a land more fertile for revolutions than any in India. Why has it fallen so far behind then? Constant obsession with politics is at the root of its destruction.
1) Rajiv Gandhi must have passed into ages but his acts have still been haunting the nation.
2) Dow Chemicals is a MMS baby, blaming NM doesn’t sound sense if comparison is with Bhopal gas tragedy where safe exit gallery was provided by the then GOI ( No need to name the then PM).
Rajiv Gandhi did use the Indian Navy’s services for his personal holiday. But this is ignored and gratuitous remarks are about Modi who is giving as good as he gets.
PM Rajiv Gandhi has passed into the ages. The electorate voted him out in 1989, was willing to give him a second chance in 1991, as they did for his mother in 1980. Now the subject matter of biographers and historians. We – not I, personally, alas – are a young, hungry, impatient, aspirational nation. Each day in the life of a newly elected government is incredibly precious. Being rooted in the ideology of the past has played a big role in denuding this mandate of its promise. Many thoughtful columns will start appearing from the end of this month, analysing the five years that have gone by in a swirl, with so little to show for them.
1) Rajiv Gandhi must have passed into ages but his acts have still been haunting the nation.
2) Dow Chemicals is a MMS baby, blaming NM doesn’t sound sense if comparison is with Bhopal gas tragedy where safe exit gallery was provided by the then GOI ( No need to name the then PM).
Rajiv Gandhi did use the Indian Navy’s services for his personal holiday. But this is ignored and gratuitous remarks are about Modi who is giving as good as he gets.
PM Rajiv Gandhi has passed into the ages. The electorate voted him out in 1989, was willing to give him a second chance in 1991, as they did for his mother in 1980. Now the subject matter of biographers and historians. We – not I, personally, alas – are a young, hungry, impatient, aspirational nation. Each day in the life of a newly elected government is incredibly precious. Being rooted in the ideology of the past has played a big role in denuding this mandate of its promise. Many thoughtful columns will start appearing from the end of this month, analysing the five years that have gone by in a swirl, with so little to show for them.