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MUMBAI: India’s annual inflation rate is expected to have eased for the third consecutive week, with respite provided by softening of global crude prices, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday.

The wholesale price index is forecast to have risen 11.96 percent in the 12 months to Aug. 30, lower than previous week’s rise of 12.34 percent, according to the median estimate of 13 economists.

In early August, the inflation rate was 12.63 percent, the highest reading since annual numbers in the current data series became available in April 1995.

Shubhada Rao, chief economist at Yes Bank, who forecast 11.96 percent said a relatively higher reading a year earlier would also limit the number.

“Recent weeks have seen inflation stabilise. We expect it to peak in the third quarter and given the current trend it may peak around 13 percent,” she said.

New central bank governor Duvvuri Subbarao said on Tuesday inflation was showing signs of moderating but it was too early to conclude whether this was a trend, signalling he would wait and see before taking any fresh steps.

This would be the 23rd consecutive week that inflation would be above the central bank’s 7 percent target by the end of March. The government has said the inflation rate would hit 13 percent and thereafter start moderating from December, before settling at 8-9 percent by the end of the fiscal year in March.

A slide in prices of oil, India’s biggest import, to around $104 a barrel from a record high above $147 in mid-July, is expected to ease the pressure on inflation. reuters
 

NEW DELHI: India’s industrial output in July probably rose 6.5 percent from a year earlier, more than in recent months but still consistent with a slowing economy, a Reuters poll showed. The median forecast in a poll of 10 analysts exceeded the 5.4 percent annual growth in June and May’s 4.1 percent, although the pace of industrial growth remains well below the double-digit rates of 2006 and early 2007. “Industrial slowdown is here to stay and in our view it is yet to be bottomed out,” said N.R. Bhanumurthy, economist at the New Delhi-based Institute of Economic Growth. “We expect the present double-digit inflation rate and its associated high interest rates to continue at least until the end of this year. This would dampen investments.” Reflecting some moderation in manufacturing, the ABN AMRO Bank purchasing managers’ index (PMI) eased to a seasonally adjusted 57.8 in July from a four-month peak of 58.6 in June.

Data on Wednesday showed the infrastructure sector, which accounts for 26.7 percent of industrial output, grew an annual 4.3 percent in July, up from 3.4 percent in June. After growing at or above 9 percent for the past three fiscal years, India’s economy is slowing. In the June quarter, Asia’s third-largest economy grew 7.9 percent from a year earlier, its slowest rate in 3-½ years. reuters
 
Sensex plunges by 772.62 points


Mumbai (PTI): The BSE benchmark Sensex today plunged by 772.62 points at 1045 hrs following bankruptcy protection filed by US investment bank Lehman Brothers and weak Asian bourses.

The Singapore's Strait Times and Taiwan Weighted Index were down by about 3 to 4 per cent in early trade while other major markets in Asia like as Hong Kong and Japan remained closed for a public holiday.

The Bombay Stock Exchange 30-share barometer tumbled by 772.62 points or 5.5 per cent to rule at 13,228.19 from its last weekend's close after banking stocks led by ICICI and HDFC Bank slipped sharply.

The broader 50-share Nifty of the National Stock Exchange also dipped below 4,000-mark by falling 242.40 points or 5.56 per cent to 3,986.05.

A terror strike in the national capital over the weekend also had adverse impact on the market sentiment. Investors looked unwilling to make any transactions in the prevailing market situation.

Brokers said the collapse of Lehman Brothers and worries of a severe economic recession in the United States virtually shook the global financial markets.

Key stocks such as ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, State Bank of India, BHEL, RIL, Bharti Airtel, DLF, HDFC, Infosys Technologies, ONGC and Reliance Infra dropped sharply due to heavy selling pressure
.


Perhaps some gentle Indian friends will explain what relationship SenSex has with Lehman Bros --

What relations is the US allowing Lehman to go under mean for the idea of "privatizing profits and socializing loss"
 
Bangalore designs Intel Xeon 7400 - Hardware-News-Indiatimes - Infotech

Bangalore designs Intel Xeon 7400
16 Sep, 2008, 1153 hrs IST,INDIATIMES NEWS NETWORK & AGENCIES

SAN FRANCISCO: Intel has rolled out its first chip with six brains, unveiling a "multi-core" microprocessor that boosts computing muscle while cutting back on electricity use. The new Xeon 7400 series microprocessor has been designed by none other than Intel engineers at Bangalore from scratch.

The Bangalore design centre is the first Intel team outside the US to complete the design of a 45-nanometer processor.

Post its inception in 2001, the Xeon 7400 series is the first chip to come out of Intel's Bangalore design centre. The centre had previously worked on another Xeon server chip called Whitefield.

But that chip never made it to market. It was cancelled in 2005, when Intel revised its product road maps to better compete with Advanced Micro Devices, and the Indian design team soon put its focus on Dunnington.

The Dunnington chip design marks a technical milestone for Intel, as it uses a monolithic die, the term engineers use to describe putting all of the cores on a single piece of silicon.

Intel's existing quad-core processor lines use two pieces of silicon, each with two cores, packaged together. That approach made the older quad-core chips easier to produce and avoided the manufacturing difficulties that hampered the release of AMD's Barcelona chip, an x86 server chip with four cores on a single piece of silicon. Those difficulties were compounded by AMD's transition to a new 65-nanometer manufacturing process.

With the introduction of Dunnington, and the upcoming Nehalem line of quad-core processors that also uses a monolithic design, Intel waited until its 45-nanometer process was in mass production, with any technical difficulties presumably ironed out, before making this transition.

"When developers ask you for something you can pull it out of the air, literally," VeriSign engineering director John Bosco said of virtualisation made possible by multi-core chips.

Multi-core chips basically allow computers to divvy up tasks to work on simultaneously instead of having a single powerful processor handle a job in a linear style from start to finish.

"It helps keep things exciting. Our development community has embraced the multi-core era," Bosco said.
Dell, Hewlett Packard, IBM, Unisys and Fujitsu are among the computer makers building the new Xeon 7400 chips into servers designed for business networks, according to Intel.
 
Rupee posts biggest fall in a decade- Forex-Markets-The Economic Times
MUMBAI: The rupee posted its biggest fall in a decade on Tuesday, hit by risk aversion and banks arbitraging a weaker offshore rate, although suspected central bank intervention stopped the slide just short of 47 per dollar.

The partially convertible rupee ended at 46.89/90 per dollar, off a trough of 46.99 which was its lowest since July 24, 2006.

The rupee fell 1.8 percent from its close of 46.05/06 on Monday, its biggest fall since May 14, 1998, according to Reuters daya, when the currency fell 2 percent after sanctions were imposed on India for its nuclear testing. One-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoting at 47.15/25, weaker than the onshore rate, indicating a bearish near-term outlook for the rupee.

That also created an arbitrage opportunity, where the dollar is bought against the rupee in the onshore market and sold in the offshore NDF market to exploit the price differential. "There are no (dollar) sellers in the market apart from the central bank. There is lot of oil, equity and NDF-related dollar demand, and even importers are covering near-term imports," said Madhusudan Somani, associate director of financial markets at Yes Bank.

"The rupee may test 47.20-25 levels in the near term," he added. Dealers said the central bank was seen selling dollars to halt the rupee's sharp decline, but sales were offset by demand for the US currency. At its low on Tuesday, the rupee was down 6.5 percent in September and more than 16 percent in 2008. Dealers estimated the central bank had sold $1.5-$2 billion to put a floor under the rupee on Tuesday.

Indian shares pulled out from a nosedive to end almost level on Tuesday after they had opened down 3.5 percent. Capital outflows from the local shares so far in 2008 total a net $8.4 billion, including $1 billion in September, a sharp turnaround from a record net inflows of $17.4 billion in 2007.

Traders said broad strength in the dollar versus other currencies overseas was also hurting sentiment on the rupee. The dollar steadied near 4-month lows versus the yen on Tuesday, but held gains against high yielders as investors took refuge in safe-haven assets following the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
 
Iran to Seek Revision of Gas Tariff; IPI Pipeline All Set for Further Delays

In a move that could lead to further delay in the USD 7.4 billion Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline project, Tehran has demanded a revision in the gas tariff and the pricing formula agreed upon earlier. Iran has sought a change in the gas pricing formula and tariff citing a hike in international oil prices, a media report has said.

According to the draft of the Gas Sales Purchase Agreement (GSPA) agreed upon by Islamabad and Tehran, the two sides had decided to link the gas tariff with the Japan Crude Cocktail price. While the Pakistani government claims that a revision in the gas price would be possible only after four years, Iran has conveyed its intentions to revise the formula after three years, the Daily Times newspaper said quoting sources in the Petroleum Ministry.

The project has been marked by delays after India and Pakistan failed to resolve the issue of gas transit fee. A committee formed by the Iranian President to resolve the transit fee issue between Pakistan and India had failed to find a solution, sources said, adding, Pakistan had demanded 60 cents per MMBTU (Million British Thermal Units) transit fee during the talks here on April 25 between the petroleum ministers of the two nations.

They said New Delhi was unwilling to give over 15 cents per MMBTU transit fee to Islamabad on transmission to India. Pakistan and Iran will discuss the gas pricing formula in Tehran later this month during a meeting, which is also likely to discuss issue of transit fee between Pakistan and India.

Earlier, both Pakistan and India wanted a fixed price for the gas imported from Iran, but the caretaker government in Pakistan had agreed to a periodic revision of gas prices.
Iran to Seek Revision of Gas Tariff; IPI Pipeline All Set for Further Delays | India Defence
 
Iran to Seek Revision of Gas Tariff; IPI Pipeline All Set for Further Delays

In a move that could lead to further delay in the USD 7.4 billion Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline project, Tehran has demanded a revision in the gas tariff and the pricing formula agreed upon earlier. Iran has sought a change in the gas pricing formula and tariff citing a hike in international oil prices, a media report has said.

According to the draft of the Gas Sales Purchase Agreement (GSPA) agreed upon by Islamabad and Tehran, the two sides had decided to link the gas tariff with the Japan Crude Cocktail price. While the Pakistani government claims that a revision in the gas price would be possible only after four years, Iran has conveyed its intentions to revise the formula after three years, the Daily Times newspaper said quoting sources in the Petroleum Ministry.

The project has been marked by delays after India and Pakistan failed to resolve the issue of gas transit fee. A committee formed by the Iranian President to resolve the transit fee issue between Pakistan and India had failed to find a solution, sources said, adding, Pakistan had demanded 60 cents per MMBTU (Million British Thermal Units) transit fee during the talks here on April 25 between the petroleum ministers of the two nations.

They said New Delhi was unwilling to give over 15 cents per MMBTU transit fee to Islamabad on transmission to India. Pakistan and Iran will discuss the gas pricing formula in Tehran later this month during a meeting, which is also likely to discuss issue of transit fee between Pakistan and India.

Earlier, both Pakistan and India wanted a fixed price for the gas imported from Iran, but the caretaker government in Pakistan had agreed to a periodic revision of gas prices.
Iran to Seek Revision of Gas Tariff; IPI Pipeline All Set for Further Delays | India Defence
 
India's hardware design prowess on the global map
Bs Reporter / Bangalore September 17, 2008, 3:37 IST

A Bangalore-based team has developed the Intel Xeon 7400 series processor, which is Intel’s first six-core central processing unit.


India's hardware design capabilities have got a shot in the arm with the launch of semiconductor giant Intel's next generation microprocessors, which were fully designed by the Intel India development team here. The project that was started almost two years ago with a team of around 300 design engineers was finished two months ahead of the schedule.

INTEL’S INDIA CONNECTION

# Intel started its India operations in Bangalore in 1988
# The Bangalore-based Intel India Development Centre (IIDC), Intel’s largest non-manufacturing site outside of the US, started operations in 1998
# Intel India’s workforce has grown from 100 employees in 2000 to about 2,500 in 2007
# Intel’s investments in India to date have been over $1.7 billion
# The product development teams at IIDC contribute significantly to most of Intel’s products and platforms

Smaller than the size of a matchbox, each microprocessor contains 1.9 billion transistors, which makes it suitable for companies that handle a heavy amount of data. Formerly codenamed Dunnigton, the Intel Xeon 7400 series processor is Intel’s first six-core central processing unit (CPU). Such servers can be deployed to handle data demanding workloads in sectors such as BFSI, telecom and the stock market, according to K Ananth Krishnan, CTO, Tata Consultancy Services, which helped in conducting the validation and testing of the microprocessors.

Internally, TCS is planning to use the servers that use Xeon 7400 series microprocessors. According to Intel, more than 50 system manufacturers including Dell, Fujitsu, Hitachi, HP, IBM and Sun are soon expected to launch servers based on the Xeon 7400 processor series.

The previous generation of microprocessors had four processing units (cores) in each chip. Three years back, for 96 CPUs you would have had to install 96 servers, which would have occupied a lot of space. "But now we can have the same computing power in one server, which will not only consume less area, but less power as well. Besides, when compared with the previous generation Intel processors, the power consumed by Xeon 7400 microprocessor will be at least 10 per cent less," explained R Ravichandran, director, sales, Intel South India.

The six-core microprocessor features six processing ‘cores’ built into each chip with 16 MB of shared cache memory. This makes the servers that use such microprocessors suitable for handling intensive enterprise applications such as databases, business intelligence, enterprise resource planning and server planning.

Intel India started focussing on hardware design almost six years back. The design of Intel's first six-core Xeon microprocessor was completed on August 15, 2007, when India was celebrating its 60th year of independence. The Intel India team planned and executed the complete design activities including front-end design, pre-silicon logic validation and back-end design. The post-silicon validation, which test the market readiness and the product performance, was also undertaken at Intel's Bangalore facility.

"We are really enthralled to be a part of the team that worked with this complex project which earned us the distinction of designing India's first microprocessor productised for the global market. This is, in fact, a great day for semiconductor research and development in India," said Praveen Vishakantaiah, president, Intel India. "Going forward, India would continue to be a strategic location for high-end technology development for Intel globally," he added.

India's hardware design prowess on the global map
 


Small fry to build big canals under Vibrant Gujarat

16 Sep 2008, 0519 hrs IST, Rajiv Shah ,TNN


GANDHINAGAR: Vibrant Gujarat wants to dot some of state's major canal networks, including the Narmada main canal, with mini-micro-hydro power projects. And imagine whom does it propose to choose for this - a company called Krishna Kanhaiya Hydro Power Pvt Ltd, owned by a UK-based NRI Riyen Ramani.

Already, it has earned a contract worth Rs 18 crore to start building mini-microhydro power projects on the canal coming out of Karjan dam, lying dormant for nearly three decades.

One of its directors has been an ex-Congress MLA from Mandvi, who even today takes rounds of Sachivalaya to pursue the case for Krishna Kanhaiya, admits that when the company was founded three or four years ago its worth was a mere Rs 1 lakh.

Yet, it signed up two memoranda of understanding (MoUs) with the state government at the Vibrant Gujarat summit in January 2005 - for micro hydropower plants on Narmada canal for Rs 146.1 crore and on Karjan canal for Rs 22 crore.

After the contract for Karjan canal was cleared early this year, the Gujarat Infrastructure Development Board (GIDB) began the process of clearing the file of the company for having micro-hydro powers on Narmada main canal in central Gujarat, Saurashtra and Kutch.

The file was sent to the GIDB by the Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd (SSNNL) after irrigation minister Nitin Patel personally intervened in the matter . Ex-MLA , Chhabilbhai Patel, who is close to Union textile minister Shankarsinh Vaghela, claims, "Today, the company's worth is Rs 10 crore."

Significantly, the company has been chosen not after floating open competitive bids. Sachivalaya sources said, the company was allowed to go ahead with the project to have mini-micro-hydro power plants after it put forward the proposal for what is called 'Swiss route' or the 'challenge route' .

Under this, the GIDB, chaired by Chief Minister Narendra Modi, allows a 'goahead ' to the companies that come up with 'unique projects' . They need not go through the tedious bidding process.

A senior official said, 'When Krishna Kanhaiya came up with its proposal exercising the Gujarat Infrastructure Development Act's Swiss route, it did not submit financial or technical parameters. Nor did it submit details of equity or bank balance. Even today, the state government has no such details. Yet, there is a possibility that it may be cleared. If it happens, it would be a Vibrant Gujarat miracle, of allowing a company founded on Rs 1 lakh equity to do Rs 200 crore business."

Small fry to build big canals under Vibrant Gujarat -Ahmedabad-Cities-The Times of India
 
Rupee rises by 62 paise against US dollar
17 Sep 2008, 1135 hrs IST,PTI

MUMBAI: The Indian rupee rose by 62 paise to 46.27/28 against the US currency today as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced measures to ease the liquidity crunch and bolster the sliding currency.

In a bid to prevent any further adverse impact on the local markets of the turmoil in the global financial markets, the central bank on Tuesday decided to allow banks to borrow more by relaxing the statutory liquidity ratio (SLR). The apex bank also expanded the liquidity adjustment facility scheme.

In response to a series of forex measures, the domestic currency resumed stronger at 46.38/40 a dollar from its last close of 46.89/90 and later jumped to 46.27/28 a dollar in late morning deals at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (forex) market.

Forex dealers said the rupee bounced back with a vengeance as foreign banks sold dollars heavily after the RBI's steps to cool the financial markets.

The rupee had fallen by a huge 84 paise or 1.82 per cent yesterday reacting negatively to fall-out of the on-going credit crisis in the US.

The local unit had lost 229 paise or 5.13 per cent, in the last six days amid heavy capital outflows and heavy dollar demand.


Rupee rises by 62 paise against US dollar-India Business-Business-The Times of India
 
RTTNews - Economic News, Economic Reports, Global Economic News,Global Economic Reports, Economic Market Analysis...

Despite global woes, India's growth rate will exceed 8% this fiscal year, the Prime Minister said on Wednesday at the two-day governors' conference in New Delhi. "The overall growth rate of the economy will still exceed 8%, making India the world's second fastest growing economy," he said. Earlier, the PM's Economic Advisory Council, in its mid-year review, had pegged economic growth to slow down to 7.7% this fiscal year, substantially lower than the 9% growth achieved in 2007-08.

Manmohan Singh said there are signs of moderation in the high inflation and expressed confidence that the situation will improve further in the coming months because of the measures the government has taken. Prices in the domestic markets have been rising because of the steep increase in import prices of petroleum products and other commodity prices, he said. However, Singh warned that the world is entering a decade of rising commodity prices, particularly in the case of food grains. So India must pay adequate attention to self-sufficiency in food grains, he noted.
 
Quiet Revolution | Print Article | Newsweek.com

Quiet Revolution
While Asia reels from a food crisis, India is benefiting from three years of investment in farming.

Jason Overdorf
NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE
Sep 12, 2008 | Updated: 11:24 a.m. ET Sep 13, 2008
The food crisis earlier this year hit developing countries particularly hard, but India has fared surprisingly well. That's partly because India had already gone through a crisis of its own, three years ago, when surpluses were depleted; agricultural output was hardly growing; and farmers were committing suicide in record numbers. For this reason, agricultural productivity has been a hot-button issue for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. To keep his party in power, Singh needed not only to increase food production, but also to increase farmer incomes and end a debt crisis. Despite these gains, India lags behind China and Vietnam in productivity. P.K. Joshi, director of the New Delhi-based National Centre for Agricultural Economics and Policy Research, spoke with NEWSWEEK's Jason Overdorf about the challenges India faces. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: India produces only about half as much rice per hectare as China, the world's largest producer, and just about a third less than Vietnam. Why are India's crop yields so low?
P.K. Joshi: We need not compare China's yield and India's yield, because of several reasons. The first reason is that India is a very heterogenous country, from irrigated area to rain-fed area and rice is also grown in very marginal areas. So the average productivity seems to be very low. If we look to our irrigated areas, the yields are very high compared to any part of the world, and in rain-fed areas they are low because of less water and other factors. In China, they are using more than two-and-a-half times [the fertilizer that] Indian farmers are [using]. And China is growing hybrid rice, which has very high potential, and because of their governance system, they distribute the seed, and the farmers have to produce that variety.

In India, we have a democratic society, and the farmer is free to choose any variety or any hybrid. If the farmer has enough money to buy good seed, he does. But if not, he uses his own seed (from the year before). Another reason is the length of growing season. You know, in China, they take one crop per year. If you see our farmers, in Punjab they are growing rice and wheat in one year. In Haryana, rice and wheat. In some parts of West Bengal, the entire Indo-Gangetic Plain, three rice crops are being taken up per year. So if you compare the double crops, it will be on par with the Chinese one crop per year.

Should India be doing more to encourage farmers to use hybrids?
Yes, definitely. If we are speaking particularly about rice, then I would say that in rice, the hybrids have very high potential. There's a difference between high yielding varieties and hybrids. A hybrid is a cross between two different male and female plants, but the varieties are self-pollinating, so the hybrid has higher potential.

One issue for India's agricultural productivity appears to be water scarcity. Does India need more irrigation projects?
We do not have a water scarcity. But the issue of water management is important. We need to harvest water; use it more appropriately, use it more judiciously.

Has India invested sufficiently in agriculture, or has it fallen behind China and other Asian nations?
These countries are investing huge in agricultural research and also in agricultural development programs. In India, we [used to have] a huge surplus--if you go only six years back we used to have a huge buffer stock [of food grains]. [Unfortunately] we wanted to get rid of that buffer stock, either by subsidizing food or through many different social safety net programs. We started reducing poverty through these distribution programs, so investment in agriculture was reduced. And I would tell you that right now, this government has started increasing investment in agriculture, but it's still lower than what it used to be in 1970, if we compare in terms of percentage of agricultural GDP.

Why hasn't India been able to boost agricultural investment further? Singh has talked about this as a big issue since he came into office.
During the last three years, a lot of investment has been done in the agriculture sector because there was a serious crisis in Indian agriculture three years ago. Everybody was talking about agrarian distress. Farmers were committing suicide. And agricultural growth was less than 2 percent, while the target was 4 percent and more. The government [made] agriculture [a top] priority. Investment started increasing. Programs were tuned to increase agricultural production. [Prices were controlled] so they didn't rise as quickly as they did in the global market. The result was that when there was a serious food crisis around the world this year, India was almost comfortable. We were importing wheat two years ago, but for the past two years we have not thought about importing wheat. We now have a surplus in rice as well as wheat.

For several years, the growth rate of India's agricultural output has been slow. Apart from more investment, what does India need to do to rejuvenate the green revolution?
We expect the same kind of green revolution, which we witnessed in the mid 60s and early 70s. But we have an unnoticed revolution in Indian agriculture. If you look at sugar production, if you look at cotton, or dairy milk production, poultry or fish, or horticulture--which is vegetables and fruits, even maize--you see that the production of these commodities has remarkably increased. Also, you will notice that this year we had record food grain production--230.5-million tons. We have not seen that kind of food production during the green-revolution days. At that time, the reason we realized it was a revolution was that we were hungry. There was a famine in 1966, and suddenly production increased. Now that kind of hunger is not there, so we are ignoring the increase in production.

The introduction of genetically modified crops has been a controversial topic in India. Why are Indian farmers and activists concerned about GM foods?
Among activists, the apprehension is that [GM crops] may adversely affect [human] health. There's no evidence so far, globally, that it will. But activists [worry about] playing with nature and using genes from other organisms to change another species. The proponents feel that the future lies with these genetically modified crops, because the [cultivation] area is shrinking for crops, and you have to increase production. Production can be increased only by increasing productivity.

Even during the green revolution period, when high-yielding varieties came, there was a lot of apprehension. I still remember in 1967-1968 activists saying that it would create [stomach ulcers and that] the taste is not good. From the health point of view, the nutritional point of view, there was no negative effect during the green revolution. So may be the case with genetically modified commodities.

A lot of farmers seem to be shifting from essential grains to horticulture and cash crops to take advantage of the end consumer's higher spending power. Is it a concern from a food security standpoint that they're switching away from food grains?
As our incomes are increasing, as urbanization is taking place, as globalization is unfolding, the demand of the consumers is shifting away from cereal based diets to high-value commodities or processed commodities. Horticulture crops like fruits and vegetables have increased, milk products have increased. You now see lots of ice cream parlors--demand for processed dairy products [is rising]. Farmers are responding.

All these commodities are perishable in nature. If there is a sudden increase in production, there is a flood in the market and prices crash like anything because farmers cannot store these commodities. So what we need are good cold-storage facilities, we need the cold chains [to refrigerate products on the way to market]. And I feel that the government alone can't develop so many cold storage facilities or these cold chains. The participation of the private sector is very important, in this context, to integrate the markets.

Why does so much of India's agricultural production spoil on the way to market or in storage? I've read some estimates that peg the waste as high as 40 percent.
Largely, it is the perishable commodities. In the case of grains, it is only through rats and rodents and some storage problems. But in perishable commodities the waste is extreme. This is because the markets are not well integrated; there are missing markets; the roads are not good.
 
India insulated from the US crisis: FM - Express India

New Delhi, September 18: Finance Minister P Chidambaram on Thursday said that there is no cause of concern for public sector banks as they have no exposure in US-based financial institutions, which are in deep credit crisis.
"Our banking institutions are insulated from the US crisis. PSU banks have virtually no exposure while ICICI Bank has some," he said in New Delhi.

Chidambaram was replying to queries on the fallout of global financial crisis precipitated by the collapse of Lehman Brothers and buyout of Merrill Lynch by the Bank of America.

The Finance Minister further said that there would be some credit tightening, but the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is seized of the problem.

On the fate of Tata insurance venture with the American Insurance Group, which has been taken over by the US government, Chidambaram said the Tatas have assured insurance regulator IRDA that all Tata-AIG payment obligations will be met.

Country's largest private sector lender ICICI Bank has reported an exposure of Rs 375 crore in the senior bonds of Lehman Brothers Inc.

ICICI Bank has said its London subsidiary has 57 million euro (about Rs 375 crore) exposure in Lehman Brothers which has filed for bankruptcy protection.
 

NEW DELHI, Sept 20: India’s inflation rate has held stubbornly above the 12 per cent mark, official data showed on Thursday.

Annual inflation was at 12.14 per cent for the week ended September 6 from 12.10 per cent a week earlier, according to the Wholesale Price Index, India’s most watched cost-of-living monitor.

The figure was roughly in line with analysts’ forecasts and still far above the central bank’s target of seven per cent for the fiscal year to March 31, 2009.

Analysts say they expect India’s central bank to tighten monetary policy at least one more time to get inflation under control before gradually starting to lower interest rates, most likely in 2009.

We are seeing rangebound inflation, but it may not be fully out.

We expect inflation to remain in double digits till the year end, said Siddhartha Sanyal, economist with brokerage Edelweiss Securities.

The next monetary policy announcement is scheduled for October 24.

Inflation, stoked by a rise in energy, food and other commodity prices, has nearly tripled from a year ago, and is now riding at its highest levels since the current inflation series began being compiled 13 years ago.—AFP
 

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

NEW DELHI: India is aiming for a bigger wheat harvest in 2009 than this year’s record with help from better seeds and fertilisers, and trade officials say the target is achievable and would help keep global supplies steady.

A bumper harvest in the world’s second-largest grower should ease concerns of shortages after dry weather hurt the crop in Australia, and Argentina, the world’s No 4 exporter, estimated the area planted with wheat would shrink to a 16-year low.

In India, a record output of 78.4 million tonnes of wheat this year and prospects of a bumper rice crop have calmed fears of food scarcity and encouraged the government to ease some curbs on rice exports and allow shipments of seeds of wheat.

India, which imported 5.5 million tonnes of wheat in 2006 and over a million tonnes in the following year, has set a target to produce 78.5 million tonnes next year, a government statement said on Monday.

The country aims to boost output to 80 million tonnes by 2011, but officials say more farmers need to use high-yielding varieties of seed, and have better access to irrigation facilities and fertilisers. “In high productivity areas, wheat yields seem to be plateauing,” the government statement said.

India grows only one wheat crop in a year. Farmers start sowing the main winter-planted crop in October and September and harvest the crop in March. Trade officials say if overall weather conditions remain good and temperatures do not rise in February, the country would be able to meet the production target.

“It is a reasonable target,” said M K Duttaraj, president of the Roller Flour Millers’ Federation of India. “The main concern is weather and if that remains good, I do not think there will be a problem in achieving that.”

Duttaraj said good June-September monsoon rains had improved soil texture and moisture, helping farmers improve yields. Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said on Monday that he hoped India would soon remove some controls on rice exports. India banned exports of non-basmati rice earlier this year, but this month allowed shipments of Pusa-1121 variety.
 
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