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To round off bill, or not
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Policy Watch: Agenda #4 – Stop fiddling with agri & edible oil prices
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The consecutive second term for the LDF government in Kerala provides a rare opportunity for continuity in policy and a chance to complete the agenda for transforming the economic base of the state. There is a growing realisation that the redistributive strategy of development had reached a dead end and could be further pursued only by rapidly modernising the base into a high productivity knowledge-skill-service based economy that will generate quality jobs for educated unemployed youth.
The redistributive strategy of development has ensured a much higher quality of life and welfare to the people in the state. In the SDG achievement ranking, Kerala tops in India with a score of 70. In the world ranking, while India is way below at 117, Kerala’s score would give it a rank equivalent to 73. The state is poised to reach the SDG goals by 2030 in most of the sectors, particularly in health, education, hunger and poverty. Kerala can now put forth the agenda to eradicate absolute poverty
Apr 13 2021, 6:38 PM
April 13 2021, 5:30 AM
April 13 2021, 6:38 PM
(Bloomberg Opinion) Just a few short weeks ago, Indian government officials were patting themselves on the back. India was the âpharmacy of the world,â they said, and its cheaply produced vaccines would help end the Covid-19 pandemic globally. The federal health minister declared that the country had entered âthe endgameâ of its own battle against the pandemic. Even the Reserve Bank of India announced in unusually enthusiastic ton.
(Bloomberg Opinion) Just a few short weeks ago, Indian government officials were patting themselves on the back. India was the âpharmacy of the world,â theysaid, and its cheaply produced vaccines would help end the Covid-19 pandemic globally. The federal health minister declared that the country had entered âthe endgameâ of its own battle against the pandemic. Even the Reserve Bank of India announced in unusually enthusiastic tones that India
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Just a few short weeks ago, Indian government officials were patting themselves on the back. India was the “pharmacy of the world,” they said, and its cheaply produced vaccines would help end the Covid-19 pandemic globally. The federal health minister declared that the country had entered “the endgame” of its own battle against the pandemic. Even the Reserve Bank of India announced in unusually enthusiastic tones that India had “bent [the Covid-19 curve] like Beckham” and that “soon the winter of our discontent will be made glorious summer.”
Such boasts sound foolish, at best, today. Covid-19 case numbers and deaths have begun to spike exponentially in India, easily passing the numbers recorded during last autumn’s peak. Hospital beds are running short and so are vaccine doses. Although the government has halted all vaccine exports, many states have only a few days’ supply left in stock.
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