-The Hindu This election has created new trends and narratives even as it has sharpened old ones, says Rukmini S. through an analysis of electoral data High voter Turnouts are frequently believed to be indicative of anti-incumbency. Following the record-breaking 66.7 per cent voter Turnout this time, political parties and some in the media declared that this meant that the country had voted for change. Yet The Hindu's analysis shows that there...
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Jackfruit cultivation to be promoted in a big way
-The Hindu HorticulTure Department is doing a survey on the crop in the State Karnataka: The HorticulTure Department has begun a comprehensive survey of the jackfruit crop to set the stage to promote its cultivation in a big way in the State. Jackfruit cultivation is suitable for Karnataka because of the presence of large tracts of drought-prone land. HorticulTure Director D.L. Maheshwar disclosed this at the inaugural session of a two-day international symposium...
More »Hedging farming
-The Business Standard Badly strucTured insurance leaves Indian farmers exposed Ever since its inception in the early 1970s, agriculTural insurance has defied all attempts to make it farmer-friendly and economically viable. Over half a dozen different models for farm risk management have been tried out, but with little success. The systems currently used - the National AgriculTural Insurance Scheme (NAIS) and the Modified NAIS (MNAIS) - were objected to by the Insurance...
More »Story of a fraying capitalism-Ashoka Mody and Michael Walton
-The Indian Express India's rentier capitalism is an inset in the big picTure drawn by Thomas Piketty French economist Thomas Piketty has written a scholarly tome with the humdrum title, Capital in the 21st CenTury. The book has become an overnight sensation because Piketty documents an inherent tendency for ever-increasing inequality of income and wealth in capitalist economic systems. It is not an accident, he says, that many will be left behind...
More »Correcting a historical injustice-Nalini Juneja
-The Hindu So far, the electoral promises of allocation of six per cent of GDP to education have remained as pious wishes Election manifestoes over decades have rhetorically spoken of six per cent of GDP or more to education and this election has been no exception; the actual spending on education is only around three per cent. Not surprisingly, school infrastrucTure and teaching personnel are inadequate and of poor quality while the dropout...
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