Book Record 2016-2017
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Economic Survey 2021 - Definition, Importance & Highlights
Economic Survey 2021 - Definition, Importance & Highlights The Economic Survey of India is an annual document released by the Finance Ministry, Government of India. It is a very important document from the IAS Exam perspective. Economic Survey Introduction The Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance presents the Economic Survey of India in Parliament every year, just before the Union Budget. This document is submitted to both houses of Parliament during the Budget Session. The Economic Survey reviews the developments in the Indian economy over the previous 12 months. It highlights the policy initiatives of the government, summarizes the performance on major development programs, and shows the growth prospects of the economy. It is presented by the Chief Economic Advisor (CEA). The Economic Survey 2021 has been released by the current CEA, Krishnamurthy Subramanian, ahead of the Union Budget 2021. Importance of Economic Survey The Economic Survey is a vital source for the UPSC exam, especially for the subjects Indian economy, polity, as well as, government schemes. • The Economic Survey discusses all the major government initiatives with explanations. All the dynamic and theoretical questions can be traced to this. • As per the new trend, the economy and the environment are going hand in hand. So questions can come from that perspective also. • Students can imbibe actual phrases used in the Economic Survey to frame answers for UPSC Mains Examination. • The Survey analyses and gives reasons for many issues happening around. Deep knowledge of the current policies and programs of the government also helps an aspirant to write meaningful essays. • Furthermore, the issues appraised in the Economic Survey and reforms suggested are often implemented by the government in future initiatives. -
Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Professor of Economics and Director Institute of Development Studies Kolkata
Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Professor of Economics and Director Institute of Development Studies Kolkata He has taught, researched and guided research in many institutions and universities including Presidency College, Kolkata, University of Cambridge (UK), University of Bristol (UK), Cornell University (USA), Trent University (Canada), Roskilde University (Denmark), where he was Guest Professor and Danish Research Academy, and Maison de Sciences de l’Homme, where he was Visiting Director of Studies in the Ecole des Haute Etudes en Sciences Sociale, and Curtin University of Technology, Australia, where he was Haydn Williams Fellow for 2005. He was formerly Reserve Bank of India Professor of Economics and Director, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta. Until 2005, he was a member of the State Planning Board, Government of West Bengal and was a Chairman of a committee appointed by the Government of West Bengal to report on the finances of the government during the Tenth Five Year Plan period. He acted as the official historian of State Bank of India until 1997. He was a member of the Governing Body of the Indian Council of World Affairs, New Delhi and of the Institute of the Studies in Industrial Development, New Delhi. He was also a member of the Council of both the Indian Council of Social Science Research and the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR). He was the Chairman of the Visiting Committee appointed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) to evaluate the Eleventh Five Year Plan proposals of the University of Calicut and also of the UGC Visiting Committee to evaluate the performance of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. -
Journal of Indian History and Culture JOURNAL of INDIAN HISTORY and CULTURE
Journal of Indian History and Culture JOURNAL OF INDIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE December 2015 Twenty First Issue C.P. RAMASWAMI AIYAR INSTITUTE OF INDOLOGICAL RESEARCH (affiliated to the University of Madras) The C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation 1 Eldams Road, Chennai 600 018, INDIA December 2015, Twenty First Issue 1 Journal of Indian History and Culture Editor : Dr.G.J. Sudhakar Board of Editors Dr. K.V.Raman Dr. Nanditha Krishna Referees Dr. A. Chandrsekharan Dr. V. Balambal Dr. S. Vasanthi Dr. Chitra Madhavan Dr. G. Chandhrika Published by Dr. Nanditha Krishna C.P.Ramaswami Aiyar Institute of Indological Research The C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation 1 Eldams Road Chennai 600 018 Tel : 2434 1778 / 2435 9366 Fax : 91-44-24351022 E-Mail: [email protected] / [email protected] Website: www.cprfoundation.org Sub editing by : Mr. Rudra Krishna & Mr. Narayan Onkar Layout Design : Mrs.T. PichuLakshmi Subscription Rs. 150/- (for 1 issue) Rs. 290/- (for 2 issues) 2 December 2015, Twenty First Issue Journal of Indian History and Culture CONTENTS 1 The Conflict Between Vedic Aryans And Iranians 09 by Dr. Koenraad Elst 2 Some Kushana Images of Karttikeya from Mathura 39 by Dr. V. Sandhiyalakshmi 3 Para Vasudeva Narayana 43 by Dr. G. Balaji 4 Pallava-Kadamba Interlude in Kerala: An Epigraphical Study 50 by Dhiraj, M.S. 5 Temple Managerial Groups in Early Keralam 69 by Anna Varghese 6 Irrigation and Water Supply During the Kakatiya Period 86 by Dr. D. Mercy Ratna Rani 7 Traditional Health Care in Ancient India with Reference to Karnataka 101 by Dr. -
Medieval India Two Wikipedia Articles
Medieval India Two Wikipedia Articles PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Mon, 02 Sep 2013 10:03:14 UTC Contents Articles Medieval India 1 India 2 References Article Sources and Contributors 38 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 41 Article Licenses License 42 Medieval India 1 Medieval India • Outline of South Asian history • History of Indian subcontinent Medieval India refers to the Middle Ages i.e. 8th to 18th century CE in the Indian subcontinent. It is divided into two periods: The 'early medieval period' which lasted from the 8th to the 13th century and the 'late medieval period' which lasted from the 13th to the 18th century in some definitions, though many end the period with the start of the Mughal Empire in 1526. It includes: • Hoysala Empire a prominent South Indian Kannadiga empire that ruled most of the modern day state of Karnataka between the 10th and the 14th centuries. The capital of the Hoysalas was initially located at Belur but was later moved to Halebidu. • Kakatiya Kingdom a Telugu dynasty that ruled most of current day Andhra Pradesh, India from 1083 CE to 1323 CE • Trigarta Kingdom a kingdom mentioned in the epic Mahabharata. • Delhi Sultanate is a term used to cover five short-lived dynasties • Mughal Empire was an imperial power in the Indian subcontinent from about 1526 to 1757 (though it lingered for another century). • Ahom Kingdom was a kingdom in the Brahmaputra valley in Assam, India • Reddy Kingdom was established in southern India by Prolaya Vema Reddy. -
The Full List of CSSSC Occasional Papers
1 Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta R-1 Baishnabghata Patuli Township, Calcutta 700 094 Occasional Paper Series 1. Asok Sen, ‘Iswarchandra Vidyasagar and his Elusive Milestones’. 2. Bhabatosh Datta, ‘Budget Deficit, Money Supply and Inflation’. 3. Sunil Munsi, ‘Railway Network Growth in Eastern India, 1854-1910’. 4. Dipesh Chakraborty, ‘Sasipada Banerjee: A Study in the Nature of the First Contact of the Bangali Bhadralok with the Working Classes of Bengal’. 5. Amiya Kumar Bagchi, ‘Reflections on Patterns of Regional Growth in India During the Period of British Rule’. 6. Gautam Bhadra, ‘Social Groups and Social Relations in the Town of Murshidabad, 1765-1793’. 7. Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, ‘Contemporary Studies on the Indian Party System: An Evaluative Account’. 8. Shibani Kinkar Chaube, ‘Studies in the Constitution and Government of India: A Methodological Survey’. 9. Nirmala Banerjee, ‘Demand for Electricity’. 10. Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, ‘Comintern and the Colonial Question: The Decolonisation Controversy’. 11. Dipesh Chakraborty, ‘Communal Riots and Labour: Bengal’s Jute Mill Hands in the 1890s’. 12. Nripendranath Bandyopadhyay, ‘An Enquiry into the Causes of the Sharp Increase in Agricultural Labourers in North Bengal’. 13. Arun Ghosh, comp., ‘Research Notes and Documents Collected by the Late Pradyot Mukherjee’. 14. Amiya Kumar Bagchi, ‘Choice of Techniques and Technological Development in Underdeveloped Countries: A Critique of the Non-Neoclassical Orthodoxy’. 15. Partha Chatterjee, ‘On the Scientific Study of Politics: A Review of the Positivist Method’. 16. Rudrangshu Mukherjee, ‘Trade and Empire in Awadh, 1765-1804’. 2 17. Shibani Kinkar Chaube, ‘The Ethnic and Social Bases of Indian Federalism’. 18. Debes Roy, ‘Bangla Sambad-Samayik Patre Joti Chinher Byabahar, 1818-1858’. -
Civil) No 494 of 2012 Justice Ks Puttaswamy (Retd
REPORTABLE IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO 494 OF 2012 JUSTICE K S PUTTASWAMY (RETD) & ANR ...PETITIONERS Versus UNION OF INDIA & ORS ...RESPONDENTS WITH T C (C) NO 151 OF 2013 T C (C) NO 152 OF 2013 W P (C) NO 833 OF 2013 W P (C) NO 829 OF 2013 T P (C) NO 1797 OF 2013 W P (C) NO 932 OF 2013 1 T P (C) NO 1796 OF 2013 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 144 OF 2014 T P (C) NO 313 OF 2014 T P (C) NO 312 OF 2014 SLP (CRL) NO 2524 OF 2014 W P (C) NO 37 OF 2015 W P (C) NO 220 OF 2015 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 674 OF 2015 in W P (C) NO 829 OF 2013 T P (C) NO 921 OF 2015 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 470 OF 2015 W P (C) NO 231 OF 2016 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 444 OF 2016 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 608 OF 2016 W P (C) NO 797 OF 2016 CONMT. PET. (C) NO 844 OF 2017 2 W P (C) NO 342 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 372 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 841 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 1058 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 966 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 1014 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 1002 OF 2017 W P (C) NO 1056 OF 2017 AND WITH CONMT. PET. (C) NO 34 OF 2018 in W P (C) NO 1014 OF 2017 3 J U D G M E N T INDEX A Introduction: technology, governance and freedom B The Puttaswamy1 principles B.I Origins: privacy as a natural right B.2 Privacy as a constitutionally protected right : liberty and dignity B.3 Contours of privacy B.4 Informational privacy B.5 Restricting the right to privacy B.6 Legitimate state interests C Submissions C.I Petitioners’ submissions C.2 Respondents’ submissions D Architecture of Aadhaar: analysis of the legal framework E Passage of Aadhaar Act as a Money Bill E.I Judicial Review of the Speaker’s Decision E.2 Aadhaar Act as a Money Bill F Biometrics, Privacy and Aadhaar F.I Increased use of biometric technology F.2 Consent in the collection of biometric data F.3 Position before the Aadhaar legislation 1 (2017) 10 SCC 1 4 F.4 Privacy Concerns in the Aadhaar Act 1. -
CPR Annual Report 2017-18.Pdf
annual report 2018 1 2 centre for policy research: annual report 2018 A leading public policy think tank Conducting research in multiple disciplines Contributing to a more robust public discourse 3 t is a real privilege for me to present CPR’s annual report for 2017-18. This has been a wonderfully productive year as CPR faculty continued Ito make important, award-winning contributions to the policy research landscape through field-defining books and a steady stream of peer- reviewed journal articles. These contributions are now the starting point of policy and public debate on issues as wide ranging as international relations, climate change and energy, domestic politics and public service delivery. This year we are especially proud of Lavanya Rajamani whose co-authored book titled, International Climate Change Law received the 2018 american Society of International law Certificate of Merit in a Specialised Area of International Law. CPR has a long tradition of drawing on its research to engage in the everyday life of policy making in India, shaping ideas, offering expertise and seeking to find answers to difficult policy conundrums in partnership with policymakers. In fulfilling this role, Cpr faculty have, over this year, served on as many as 20 different government committees, task forces, and technical support units. these include the Ministry of environment, Forest and Climate Change’s (MoeFCC) advisory committee on a long term Strategy for low Carbon Development; the expert committee on renewable energy act under the Ministry of new and renewable energy (Mnre); the NITI Aayog’s Committee for national strategy on Rare Earths; the curriculum advisory committee at the National University of Educational Planning and administration (NUEPA) to develop the curriculum for programmes on education; and the Working Group for the National Sample Survey 76th Round on Disability, Drinking Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Housing Condition by the National Statistical Commission. -
Economics and Development Studies
Orient BlackSwan is one of India’s best known and most respected publishing houses. Incorporated in 1948, the consistent emphasis of our publishing programme has been on quality. We also selectively reprint and co-publish outstanding titles published abroad, for the Indian market. Orient BlackSwan is the exclusive distributor for books published by: Sangam Books Universities Press t bl en ac n k a m Permanent Black r e p Social Science Press Aurum Books (An imprint of Social Science Press) Tata Institute of Social Sciences Economic and Political Weekly RCS Publishers CONTENTS Forthcoming Titles .............................................................................................. iii Economics and Development Studies ..........................................................1 E-Books .............................................................................................................21 Author Index .......................................................................................................25 Title Index ...........................................................................................................26 Order Form.........................................................................................................29 Online catalogue For more information on our books visit our online catalogue at www.orientblackswan.com Information on new books You can write to us at [email protected] for updates on our monthly arrivals and events; also visit us at www.orientblackswan.com/ newarrivals.asp -
Was the Emergence of the International Gold Standard Expected?Melodramatic Evidence from Indian Government Securities
Was the Emergence of the International Gold Standard Expected?Melodramatic Evidence from Indian Government Securities M. Flandreau and K. Oosterlinck The emergence of the gold standard has for a long time been viewed as inevitable. Fluctuations of the gold-silver exchange rate in world markets were accused to lead to brutal and unsustainable switches of bimetallic countries’ money supplies. However, more recent work has shown that the option character of bimetallism provided a stabilizing feedback loop. Using original data, this paper provides support to the new view. Using quotation prices for Indian Government bonds, we analyze agents’ expectations between 1860 and 1890. The intuition is that the spread between gold and silver bonds issued by the same entity (India) and backed by a credible agent (Britain) is a “pure” measure of the silver risk. The analysis shows that up until 1874 markets were expecting bimetallism to last. It is only after this date that markets gradually started requiring a premium to hold silver bonds indicating their belief that gold would eventually become the only metallic standard. Keywords: rate regime, gold standard, bimetallism, credibility, silver risk JEL Classifications: F33, N20 CEB Working Paper N° 11/001 January 2011 Université Libre de Bruxelles - Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management Centre Emile Bernheim ULB CP114/03 50, avenue F.D. Roosevelt 1050 Brussels BELGIUM e-mail: [email protected] Tel. : +32 (0)2/650.48.64 Fax : +32 (0)2/650.41.88 Was the Emergence of the International Gold Standard Expected?Melodramatic Evidence from Indian Government Securities January 2011 ♣ Marc Flandreau (Graduate Institute, Geneva) and Kim Oosterlinck (Université Libre de Bruxelles) ABSTRACT The emergence of the gold standard has for a long time been viewed as inevitable. -
Occasional Papers
Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta List of Occasional Papers 1. Asok Sen, Iswarchandra Vidyasagar and his Elusive Milestones. 2. Bhabatosh Datta, Budget Deficit, Money Supply and Inflation. 3. Sunil Munsi, Railway Network Growth in Eastern India, 1854-1910. 4. Dipesh Chakraborty, Sasipada Banerjee: A Study in the Nature of the First Contact of the Bangali Bhadralok with the Working Classes of Bengal 5. Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Reflections on Patterns of Regional Growth in India During the Period of British Rule. 6. Gautam Bhadra, Social Groups and Social Relations in the Town of Murshidabad, 1765-1793 . 7. Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, Contemporary Studies on the Indian Party System: An Evaluative Account. 8. Shibani Kinkar Chaube, Studies in the Constitution and Government of India: A Methodological Survey. 9. Nirmala Banerjee, Demand for Electricity. 10. Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, Comintern and the Colonial Question: The Decolonisation Controversy. 11. Dipesh Chakraborty, Communal Riots and Labour: Bengal’s Jute Mill Hands in the 1890s. 12. Nripendranath Bandyopadhyay, An Enquiry into the Causes of the Sharp Increase in Agricultural Labourers in North Bengal. 13. Arun Ghosh(comp), Research Notes and Documents Collected by the Late Pradyot Mukherjee 14. Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Choice of Techniques and Technological Development in Underdeveloped Countries: A Critique of the Non-Neoclassical Orthodoxy . 15. Partha Chatterjee, On the Scientific Study of Politics: A Review of the Positivist Method . 16. Rudrangshu Mukherjee, Trade and Empire in Awadh, 1765-1804. 17. Shibani Kinkar Chaube, The Ethnic and Social Bases of Indian Federalism. 18. Debes Roy, Bangla Sambad-Samayik Patre Joti Chinher Byabahar, 1818-1858 . -
20Years of Sahmat.Pdf
SAHMAT – 20 Years 1 SAHMAT 20 YEARS 1989-2009 A Document of Activities and Statements 2 PUBLICATIONS SAHMAT – 20 YEARS, 1989-2009 A Document of Activities and Statements © SAHMAT, 2009 ISBN: 978-81-86219-90-4 Rs. 250 Cover design: Ram Rahman Printed by: Creative Advertisers & Printers New Delhi Ph: 98110 04852 Safdar Hashmi Memorial Trust 29 Ferozeshah Road New Delhi 110 001 Tel: (011) 2307 0787, 2338 1276 E-mail: [email protected] www.sahmat.org SAHMAT – 20 Years 3 4 PUBLICATIONS SAHMAT – 20 Years 5 Safdar Hashmi 1954–1989 Twenty years ago, on 1 January 1989, Safdar Hashmi was fatally attacked in broad daylight while performing a street play in Sahibabad, a working-class area just outside Delhi. Political activist, actor, playwright and poet, Safdar had been deeply committed, like so many young men and women of his generation, to the anti-imperialist, secular and egalitarian values that were woven into the rich fabric of the nation’s liberation struggle. Safdar moved closer to the Left, eventually joining the CPI(M), to pursue his goal of being part of a social order worthy of a free people. Tragically, it would be of the manner of his death at the hands of a politically patronised mafia that would single him out. The spontaneous, nationwide wave of revulsion, grief and resistance aroused by his brutal murder transformed him into a powerful symbol of the very values that had been sought to be crushed by his death. Such a death belongs to the revolutionary martyr. 6 PUBLICATIONS Safdar was thirty-four years old when he died. -
Economic Survey 2016-17
Economic Survey 2016-17 Government of India Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs Economic Division January, 2017 CONTENTS Chapter Page Name of the Chapter No. No. v Acknowledgements vii Preface ix Abbreviations xi Eight Interesting Facts about India SECTION I: THE PERSPECTIVE 1 Economic Outlook and Policy Challenges 1 Introduction 6 Global Context 9 Review of Developments in 2016-17 13 Outlook for 2016-17 20 Outlook for 2017-18 22 Other Issues 22 Redistribution: Universal Basic Income (UBI) as a radical new vision 23 Exchange rate policy: Vigilance and new ways of monitoring 25 Trade Policy 26 Climate Change and India 27 Ensuring Women's Privacy 30 India's Soon-to-Recede Demographic Dividend 2 The Economic Vision for Precocious, Cleavaged India 38 Introduction 42 The Road to be Traversed 46 Possible Explanations 51 Conclusion SECTION II: THE PROXIMATE 3 Demonetization: To Deify or Demonize? 53 Introduction 55 Background Facts 59 Analytics 61 Benefits 62 Early Evidence for Potential Long Term Benefits 66 Short Term Impact 69 Impact on GDP 76 Redistribution to the Government 76 Markers of Success 77 Maximizing Long Term Benefits, Minimizing Short-Term Costs 4 The Festering Twin Balance Sheet Problem 82 Introduction 89 Is the Strategy Sustainable? 94 What Needs to be Done? 98 Conclusion 5 Fiscal Framework: The World is Changing, Should India Change Too? 105 Introduction 106 India and the World: Flows 108 India and the World: Stocks 111 Conclusion 6 Fiscal Rules: Lessons from the States 113 Introduction 115 Summary of the Fiscal