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Why the Budget numbers don’t add up -Rohit Azad

-The Hindu The belt-tightening requires the poor to pay increased indirect taxes while the cushion of the social sector is consistently taken away from them. There is always a hype around a Union Budget but this time around, the expectations were running sky-high in terms of it being the make-or-break Budget for the Narendra Modi-led government since it happens to be in the middle of his five-year term. I must say at...

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Pretending to be pro-poor, little change over UPA -Arun Kumar

-The Tribune While giving concessions worth Rs.1,000 crore in the direct taxes paid by the rich, the government plans to net an extra Rs. 19,000 crore in indirect taxes, which are contributed by all. This reveals a regressive intent. Like all Union budgets, this one also is long on promises but hides the real dynamics, namely, how the resources are to be raised for the promised very substantial expenditures. The budget is...

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No Gamechangers For Farmers -Ashok Gulati

-The Indian Express Budget makes the right moves on agriculture, but they may not be bold enough. In the last two weeks, Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed three rallies of farmers, one each in MP, Karnataka and UP. Although it was late in the game, as farmers have been reeling under acute distress for two years, yet better late than never. Addressing the rallies, the PM thundered he would like to...

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A budget for BhaRAT can reset the narRATive -Anil Padmanabhan

-Livemint.com Pro-poor and yet not populist can be the single defining strand of this year’s Union budget The run-up to this year’s Union budget, especially the past one week, has taken place in the backdrop of an unprecedented, vicious political confrontation between the ruling BhaRATiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition. Together with the hit-wicket tendencies of the BJP-led National DemocRATic Alliance (NDA), it probably exaggeRATed the magnitude of every challenge...

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Budget 2016: Govt to spend Rs 5,500 cr on crop insurance scheme

-Business Standard An uniform premium of 2% needs to be paid by farmers for all Kharif crops and 1.5% for all Rabi crops The government is planning to spend Rs 5,500 crore for the crop insurance scheme that was announced earlier, the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana. In his Budget speech, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that the farmers will have to pay a nominal premium for the coverage. There will be an...

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