-PTI The Union cabinet today approved the recommendations of the Majithia wage boards allowing an increase in salaries and allowances that will benefit over 40,000 newspaper employees, including journalists. The revised wage will be applicable with effect from July 1, 2010, while other allowances, such as those for transport, house rent and hardship, shall be effective from the date of notification in the gazette, labour minister Mallikarjun Kharge said. The revised pay scale...
More »SEARCH RESULT
A tale of three islands
-The Economist The world’s population will reach 7 billion at the end of October. Don’t panic IN 1950 the whole population of the earth—2.5 billion—could have squeezed, shoulder to shoulder, onto the Isle of Wight, a 381-square-kilometre rock off southern England. By 1968 John Brunner, a British novelist, observed that the earth’s people—by then 3.5 billion—would have required the Isle of Man, 572 square kilometres in the Irish Sea, for its standing...
More »India leads in rotavirus infection deaths: Lancet by Aarti Dhar
Close to one lakh children below the age of five years died of diarrhoea attributable to rotavirus infection in 2008, accounting for 22 per cent of the total deaths reported globally, reports the latest edition of the Lancet Infection Diseases magazine. Diarrhoea related with the rotavirus infection resulted in 453,000 deaths worldwide in 2008 among children younger than five years—37 per cent of deaths attributable to diarrhoea with five countries accounting...
More »Ministers rack up Rs 3.67cr fuel bills by Hemali Chhapia
In the winter of 2009, a few months after the Congress announced a financial austerity drive for its staff, Sonia Gandhi famously travelled by economy class. But what UPA government's ministers probably saved on air fares, they seem to have more than made up on land. Fuel bills of Union ministers, since the financial curbs were put in place, were accessed by RTI activist Chetan Kothari. Merely 31 of the 84...
More »How Economic Inequality Is (Literally) Making Us Sick by Maia Szalavitz
Imagine there was one changeable factor that affected virtually every measure of a country's health— including life expectancy, crime rates, addiction, obesity, infant mortality, stroke, academic achievement, happiness and even overall prosperity. Indeed, this factor actually exists. It's called economic inequality. A growing body of research suggests that such inequality — more so than income or absolute wealth alone — has a profound influence on a population's health, in every socioeconomic...
More »