What's new

Indian Government announces FDI in many industries!!

Latest news - 50% of investment has to happen in village....have make product in India only.......good good....

Mamata dont try to spoil the party

She will be out on her a$$ if she does.. She already has 2 strikes against her name.. Nano factory and FDI proposal last year.. She has used up all her credibility.. Looks like the TIME article has made our sleepy PM wake up and get his act in order...
 
. .
hmm.. come 2014 people will still remember events prior to 2012. 2G / Coalgate will still be hot subject during election year.

Coming back to the topic..

FDI in aviation is good. Atlast will see some overseas expertise coming into Indian aviation sector. Indian Aviation Industry is in dire straits. Having one of the largest movement of air passangers, I really wonder how a national carrier with somany routes suffer so badly.
 
. .
Or what????

well she`ll protest but do not withdraw support from government ...

only politicians can do that...."thappad ka ke bhi bistar main saath hi sona hai" nahi to neeche sona parega...
 
.
Someone Pls suggest MMS to open up FDI in indian railways and in various state transport corps. to improve rail and bus servives for passengers.

MP transport buses are worst in india .............:cry:
 
.
A saying we hear repeatedly in the halls of Delhi is that only when the government’s back is absolutely against the wall will it do what is necessary to revive its own fortunes and stave off economic disaster.

It did it in 1991. It may – may – have just done it again.


None of the moves that the government approved Thursday and Friday – a rise in diesel prices, a decision to revive foreign direct investment in supermarkets, foreign carriers being permitted to invest in Indian airlines, expanded investment in broadcast – came as a surprise in and of themselves. They’ve all been called for years by economists and industry. Heck, the retail decision was already passed once before it was shelved.

But the barrage of reforms, and the fact that the government finally found the consensus and the boldness to push these, will be a great surprise to the many investors, economists (and journalists) who had given up on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as having the political fight left in him to make the moves that everyone said he has wanted for years.

Of course, there is no guarantee that these will all see the light of day. Indeed, Mr. Singh and his Cabinet colleagues, presumably with the consent of Congress President Sonia Gandhi, appear to be willing to gamble the coalition itself.

One imagines Mamata Banerjee, the firebrand West Bengal chief minister, coalition ally, and fierce critic of moves she views as against the poor and against shopkeepers, not quite knowing where to start in the inevitable wailing that will emanate from Kolkata. But we can be sure that she will find her voice soon enough, as will the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party and the Samajwadi Party, which offers the coalition lukewarm support from outside the coalition.

But firing off this fusillade of controversial economic measures may prove to be a smart strategy. The government knows critics will carp and possibly win if it goes cautiously and piecemeal, reform by reform. It has tried that and it has failed and it has wasted time in the much-needed task of reviving India’s sagging economic fortunes.

By overwhelming the opposition with all of these measures at once, it will reset the political landscape and, fortuitously but probably not coincidentally, divert attention from “Coalgate,” the coal allotment controversy which promises to eat away at the government and the bureaucracy for months to come.

As a political counter-attack, it has a lot going for it. It also is likely to ensure that at least some of these measures will survive. Who will be upset about diesel tomorrow when there’s FDI in retail to get worked up about? Who will slam opening up aviation when there are diesel price raises? You get the picture.

The government has faced a dreadful time since it was re-elected in 2009, and most of it rightly so. But when politically risky, bold initiatives are taken, it deserves credit. Today is one of those days. And if the measures signal a new determination to take the steps needed to return India to being the envy of an otherwise recession-weary world, the government may find its own fortunes much revived as a result.
 
. .
2004 - 2012 = Corrution and corruption and corruption .
2013 = Fdi gets passed Indians get over exited ,
2014 - Upa again gets elected ,
2014 - 2019 = Fool Indians are again fucked up .

This time its Modi's time !!
 
.
Look's like congress has timed this to go with the near future elections so the results will show when it matters and they can thump their chests about it.
 
.
Look's like congress has timed this to go with the near future elections
I think it was more to do with the credit downgrade and 2014 is quite far there will be a zillion reason to vote or not to vote for Congress ;)
 
.
Mamata Banerjee sets 72-hour deadline to withdraw FDI

Mamta ko Rang de bansanti ki DVD send karni padegi, with message ki uss neta ki jagah ab tera number hai....

F***g idiot....
 
.
Its really a bad decision , definitely our products can't compete with them and small retailers will be affected badly. Its creates unemployment at some extent. Now westerners will decide what farmers have to cultivate , they will create artificial demand in markets in future , over price of agriculture products , they will force farmers to get seeds(thereby ruled out native species) from them , introduction of exotic crops , applying tremendous amount of fertilizers to get over yield it will affect our land badly those things are concealing in the name of farmers benefits. If foreigners entering into agriculture sector it nothing but leading us to slavery coz agriculture is backbone of India.

i think ur stretching a bit far its not all that bad
plus it will take at least 5-8 years to have a considerable presence in metros n major cities only which don't even count half of our population

In addition it won't be a cake walk for foreign retailers in India as there r many Indian players who would be competing with them as well along with all the protest they r gonna face before even starting even their first store in India:D

so plz stop this colonizing n slavery propaganda... :hitwall:
 
. . .

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom