Exercise begins in June, but beneficiaries of govt schemes will still be those identified as poor by Plan panel India has embarked on an exerciseto identify the poor that will in reality end up choosing who will be eligible for benefits and who won’t, an outcome that could be controversial. The Union cabinet on Thursday approved the launch in June of a census to identify those living below the poverty line (BPL),...
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MLAs' fortunes grow more than all other investments by Atul Thakur
When it comes to increasing wealth, legislative experience, it turns out, beats the best investment planning hollow. An analysis of the assets of re-contesting legislators certainly suggests that – with the growth in their assets being more than what investing in gold, mutual funds or fixed deposits would yield. According to analysis of Affidavits done by the Association for Democratic Reforms and National Election Watch, the percentage rise in assets of...
More »Supreme Court orders CBI to probe MGNREGA ‘irregularities' by J Venkatesan
CBI told to submit first report within six months Many States erred in implementing the schemes The Supreme Court on Thursday directed the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to probe alleged misuse of the schemes under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) in 100 villages in six districts of Orissa. A three-judge Bench of Chief Justice S.H. Kapadia, Justices K.S. Radhakrishnan and Swatanter Kumar gave this direction on a petition...
More »Ministries refuse to file Affidavit on hunger deaths by Nitin Sethi
The health and women & child development ministries have refused to give an Affidavit to the Supreme Court on how many children die of hunger in India every year. UNICEF says 50% of all the deaths of children aged below five years are from malnutrition. That works out to 2,438 children dying every day for lack of food. But no one in the government is ready to stick its neck out...
More »Panel defends BPL cut-off
The Planning Commission has defended the poverty line cut-off and urged the Supreme Court not to “interfere with the methodology developed by experts over the years to estimate the incidence of poverty.” However, it left a window for the court to direct an upward revision of the limit —daily consumption expenses per head of Rs 20 in urban areas and Rs 15 in rural areas at 2004-2005 prices — saying “these...
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