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The Protesting Tamil Farmer Pays For The UP Farmer’s Loan Waiver. Northies have replaced British

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On April 1, 2017, a hundred farmers from the southern state of Tamil Nadu (TN) with half shaven heads and moustaches, rolled naked on the roads in the scorching Delhi heat. These farmers had travelled more than 3,000 kilometers from their home state of TN to Delhi, carrying with them the skulls of their fellow farmers who had committed suicide, or so they claimed. These intense and creative protests were ostensibly to attract the Prime Minister’s attention to the drought situation in TN and a consequent clamour for waiver of their agriculture loans. It didn’t work. On that day, the Prime Minister inaugurated the “Smart India Hackathon” and spoke about the “era of the Internet of Things”.

Three days later, 1.5 crore farmers of the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP) were granted a waiver of their agriculture loans, totalling Rs 36,000 crore or $5 billion by the UP government. The farmers of UP did not need to indulge in creative protests for these loan waivers. They were just rewarded for voting the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) into power in their recent state elections. The TN farmers are still protesting, to no avail.

Imagine, if these protesting TN farmers were also told that they are actually helping pay for the UP farmers’ loan waiver.
Salt on their wounds and scars. Not only does Tamil Nadu not help its own distraught farmers but it helps pay for farmers in UP. Farmers from Maharashtra are also protesting for waivers of their loans due to drought. Their protests have also been futile but Maharashtra is the biggest contributor to UP loan waivers. This is the saga of India’s federal taxation quagmire. To be clear, this column is not about the ideology or economics of farm loan waivers but about India’s fragility as a tax union.


bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2F15156e46-2b8c-4035-b807-d9ff040e27d9%2F311574566_1-20.jpg

Farmers from the southern state of Tamil Nadu sit on the ground, during a protest demanding farm loan waivers in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

UP wants to incur an expenditure of Rs 36,000 crore to waive its farmers’ loans. This will be over and above the Rs 50,000 crore in budget deficit that it already faces this year. UP will find it extremely difficult to borrow this additional Rs 36,000 crore on its own. Which means, it will need the Union government’s assistance either as direct loans or to serve as a guarantor for their borrowings.

In either case, the balance sheet of the Union government needs to be strong enough to support UP’s additional borrowing.
The Union government derives its balance sheet strength from the collective might of the various states that contribute tax revenues to the kitty of the Union government. Then, the logical next question is – which of India’s states contribute how much to this collective fiscal might of the Union government?


More than three-quarters of the Union government’s revenues are from tax collections, split roughly equally between direct and indirect taxes. HowIndiaLives, a big-data analytics startup, unearthed an answer provided by the Ministry of Finance in the Upper House of Parliament on July 22, 2014, providing details of state-wise personal income tax collection for the financial year 2012-13 (FY13). Using this unique dataset for personal income taxes, our own estimates for state-wise corporate tax collections and Income Tax Department data for indirect taxes, we estimate the state-wise contribution of all taxes to the Union government’s kitty for FY15. This is not based on zone-wise corporate tax data that has an inherent skew. Please find the detailed methodology here for calculation of state wise contribution to personal income tax, corporate tax, excise, customs and service taxes.

Maharashtra alone contributes a quarter (25 percent) of all of the Union government’s tax revenues. To put that in a global context, the largest state in the United States, California, accounts for just 12 of all tax revenues of the federal government. Four large states (Maharashtra, TN, Gujarat, and Karnataka) account for more than half of all tax collections of the Union government. On a per capita basis, the average Maharashtra resident (individual and corporate) contributes nearly Rs.33,000 per year to the Centre’s tax kitty. The average Gujarati, Kannadiga, and Tamilian contribute roughly Rs 20,000 each, per year. Contrast that with the average UPite who contributes just Rs 7000, roughly one-third of the average Tamilian.

The average Maharashtrian gives as much to the Centre’s tax kitty as the resident of five states put together – Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bengal & Madhya Pradesh.

bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2F67b2410c-b2c6-40b1-9e01-590aa0baf9d0%2FPer%20Capita%20Contribution%20To%20Central%20Taxes%20By%20State.png


It is also true that the Centre gives money back to the states as devolution of resources from its pool of revenues. 42 percent of all tax revenue of the Centre is given back to the states and 58 percent is retained by the Centre for its expenses. So, each state contributes its share of taxes to the Centre and gets back a certain share. Understandably, the poorer states will get a larger share of the devolved resources while the richer states will get a smaller share. The chart shows that the Centre gives the average Bihari Rs 30,000 every year while the average Maharashtrian gets only Rs 4800. The average UPite gets back nearly twice as much from the Centre every year as the average Tamilian.

Also Read: Income Tax Collection From Mumbai Falls Below Target In FY17


bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2Fd16b89fc-ad7c-4783-8eed-52618505b68f%2FDevolution%20By%20Centre%20To%20Average%20Resident%20of%20Each%20State.png


It is evident that the richer states give more than they get back and the poorer states get back more than they give. The average Bihari gets back a whopping Rs 420 for every Rs 100 that he or she gives while the Maharashtrian only gets back Rs 15. Only Rs 34 out of every Rs 100 that the average Tamilian pays in taxes comes back for Tamil Nadu’s development while the remaining is used by the Centre and other states. Out of every Rs 100 that the average resident of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka contribute to the Centre in taxes, three-quarters (Rs 75) of it goes to help the other states and the Centre. On the other hand, for every Rs 100 that the average resident of Bihar, UP, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh contribute, they get back roughly Rs 200. Recall, every individual in the country pays taxes, direct or indirect or both.

In essence, four large states – Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka - contribute all of the economic costs of building this nation.

bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2Fd817483e-abfb-472c-bd4d-8848483bf290%2FFor%20Every%20Rs%20100%20Given%20By%20Each%20Resident%20To%20The%20Centre.png


The farmer in UP can get his loan waiver only if the UP government is able to borrow money from outside. The UP government can borrow money only if the Centre provides either an explicit or an implicit guarantee. The Centre can provide this guarantee only if its revenues are strong enough to support. Centre’s revenues are strong primarily due to revenues from a handful of states. Admittedly, this is slightly exaggerated and provocative but only to highlight the skewed and complex redistribution exercise of India’s fiscal tax revenues. The GST regime will ensure a cleaner way to administer and collect indirect taxes but will not impact the skewed redistribution.

Also Read: Farm Loan Waivers To Touch 2% Of India’s GDP Before 2019 Polls

At a time when regional pride is being stoked in the rich states of Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and Maharashtra, this continued skew in redistribution of tax revenues can potentially erupt into an emotive issue. Economic, political, demographic and social disparity among India’s states is much starker today than in the early years of the republic.

If strong regional political parties that cater exclusively to voters of their own state held forth in Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Karnataka, like they do in Tamil Nadu, India’s economic union can be severely tested.

It is no coincidence that Tamil Nadu has witnessed a spate of recent protests against everything that seemingly threatens its identity. It may be tempting to interpret the economic disparity among India’s states as a case for more redistribution from the richer to the poorer states. But given India’s unique political and social diversity, it will likely be counter-productive with adverse consequences. The time has come to let India’s states determine their own destinies, fiscally and politically.



Praveen Chakravarty is a Senior Fellow at IDFC Institute, a Mumbai-based think/do tank. His work focuses on financial sector legislation & political economy. Noise to Signal will bring you insights from that.

The author is immensely thankful to HowIndiaLives, a big data startup, for data and research support .

The views expressed here are those of the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.

www.bloombergquint.com/opinion/2017/05/29/the-protesting-tamil-farmer-pays-for-the-up-farmers-loan-waiver.amp



@SrNair We should let the poor people of the South die. Let our North Indian masters bleed us dry like the British.

@Levina @Sinopakfriend @Spring Onion @manlion @kvpak @Bharat Muslim @IndoCarib
@Infinity @maximuswarrior @salarsikander
 
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UP govt has provided loan waiver on its own account. I dont understand even if Union govt provides guarentee its the UP govt that needs to pay back or face consequences in future budget cutdowns. It will cut development budget by itself to fund the farm waiver.

However NITI AAYOG had proposed a mechanism of funding poor states heavily for first 3-5 years and if no progress is made they will be penalised and rich states will start getting their share. TN now needs more money to develop infrastructure as people here have started wanting better quality services.
 
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UP govt has provided loan waiver on its own account. I dont understand even if Union govt provides guarentee its the UP govt that needs to pay back or face consequences in future budget cutdowns. It will cut development budget by itself to fund the farm waiver.

However NITI AAYOG had proposed a mechanism of funding poor states heavily for first 3-5 years and if no progress is made they will be penalised and rich states will start getting their share. TN now needs more money to develop infrastructure as people here have started wanting better quality services.
Visit the link. I could not embed the video.
There is a video of an economist explaining the situation.

UP government's revenue are too low to finance the waiver. It's using the money allocated from the central government. Central Gov is using revenues of other states to favor Hindi belt.
 
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On April 1, 2017, a hundred farmers from the southern state of Tamil Nadu (TN) with half shaven heads and moustaches, rolled naked on the roads in the scorching Delhi heat. These farmers had travelled more than 3,000 kilometers from their home state of TN to Delhi, carrying with them the skulls of their fellow farmers who had committed suicide, or so they claimed. These intense and creative protests were ostensibly to attract the Prime Minister’s attention to the drought situation in TN and a consequent clamour for waiver of their agriculture loans. It didn’t work. On that day, the Prime Minister inaugurated the “Smart India Hackathon” and spoke about the “era of the Internet of Things”.

Three days later, 1.5 crore farmers of the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP) were granted a waiver of their agriculture loans, totalling Rs 36,000 crore or $5 billion by the UP government. The farmers of UP did not need to indulge in creative protests for these loan waivers. They were just rewarded for voting the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) into power in their recent state elections. The TN farmers are still protesting, to no avail.

Imagine, if these protesting TN farmers were also told that they are actually helping pay for the UP farmers’ loan waiver.
Salt on their wounds and scars. Not only does Tamil Nadu not help its own distraught farmers but it helps pay for farmers in UP. Farmers from Maharashtra are also protesting for waivers of their loans due to drought. Their protests have also been futile but Maharashtra is the biggest contributor to UP loan waivers. This is the saga of India’s federal taxation quagmire. To be clear, this column is not about the ideology or economics of farm loan waivers but about India’s fragility as a tax union.


bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2F15156e46-2b8c-4035-b807-d9ff040e27d9%2F311574566_1-20.jpg

Farmers from the southern state of Tamil Nadu sit on the ground, during a protest demanding farm loan waivers in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

UP wants to incur an expenditure of Rs 36,000 crore to waive its farmers’ loans. This will be over and above the Rs 50,000 crore in budget deficit that it already faces this year. UP will find it extremely difficult to borrow this additional Rs 36,000 crore on its own. Which means, it will need the Union government’s assistance either as direct loans or to serve as a guarantor for their borrowings.

In either case, the balance sheet of the Union government needs to be strong enough to support UP’s additional borrowing.
The Union government derives its balance sheet strength from the collective might of the various states that contribute tax revenues to the kitty of the Union government. Then, the logical next question is – which of India’s states contribute how much to this collective fiscal might of the Union government?


More than three-quarters of the Union government’s revenues are from tax collections, split roughly equally between direct and indirect taxes. HowIndiaLives, a big-data analytics startup, unearthed an answer provided by the Ministry of Finance in the Upper House of Parliament on July 22, 2014, providing details of state-wise personal income tax collection for the financial year 2012-13 (FY13). Using this unique dataset for personal income taxes, our own estimates for state-wise corporate tax collections and Income Tax Department data for indirect taxes, we estimate the state-wise contribution of all taxes to the Union government’s kitty for FY15. This is not based on zone-wise corporate tax data that has an inherent skew. Please find the detailed methodology here for calculation of state wise contribution to personal income tax, corporate tax, excise, customs and service taxes.

Maharashtra alone contributes a quarter (25 percent) of all of the Union government’s tax revenues. To put that in a global context, the largest state in the United States, California, accounts for just 12 of all tax revenues of the federal government. Four large states (Maharashtra, TN, Gujarat, and Karnataka) account for more than half of all tax collections of the Union government. On a per capita basis, the average Maharashtra resident (individual and corporate) contributes nearly Rs.33,000 per year to the Centre’s tax kitty. The average Gujarati, Kannadiga, and Tamilian contribute roughly Rs 20,000 each, per year. Contrast that with the average UPite who contributes just Rs 7000, roughly one-third of the average Tamilian.

The average Maharashtrian gives as much to the Centre’s tax kitty as the resident of five states put together – Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bengal & Madhya Pradesh.

bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2F67b2410c-b2c6-40b1-9e01-590aa0baf9d0%2FPer%20Capita%20Contribution%20To%20Central%20Taxes%20By%20State.png


It is also true that the Centre gives money back to the states as devolution of resources from its pool of revenues. 42 percent of all tax revenue of the Centre is given back to the states and 58 percent is retained by the Centre for its expenses. So, each state contributes its share of taxes to the Centre and gets back a certain share. Understandably, the poorer states will get a larger share of the devolved resources while the richer states will get a smaller share. The chart shows that the Centre gives the average Bihari Rs 30,000 every year while the average Maharashtrian gets only Rs 4800. The average UPite gets back nearly twice as much from the Centre every year as the average Tamilian.

Also Read: Income Tax Collection From Mumbai Falls Below Target In FY17


bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2Fd16b89fc-ad7c-4783-8eed-52618505b68f%2FDevolution%20By%20Centre%20To%20Average%20Resident%20of%20Each%20State.png


It is evident that the richer states give more than they get back and the poorer states get back more than they give. The average Bihari gets back a whopping Rs 420 for every Rs 100 that he or she gives while the Maharashtrian only gets back Rs 15. Only Rs 34 out of every Rs 100 that the average Tamilian pays in taxes comes back for Tamil Nadu’s development while the remaining is used by the Centre and other states. Out of every Rs 100 that the average resident of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka contribute to the Centre in taxes, three-quarters (Rs 75) of it goes to help the other states and the Centre. On the other hand, for every Rs 100 that the average resident of Bihar, UP, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh contribute, they get back roughly Rs 200. Recall, every individual in the country pays taxes, direct or indirect or both.

In essence, four large states – Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka - contribute all of the economic costs of building this nation.

bloombergquint%2F2017-05%2Fd817483e-abfb-472c-bd4d-8848483bf290%2FFor%20Every%20Rs%20100%20Given%20By%20Each%20Resident%20To%20The%20Centre.png


The farmer in UP can get his loan waiver only if the UP government is able to borrow money from outside. The UP government can borrow money only if the Centre provides either an explicit or an implicit guarantee. The Centre can provide this guarantee only if its revenues are strong enough to support. Centre’s revenues are strong primarily due to revenues from a handful of states. Admittedly, this is slightly exaggerated and provocative but only to highlight the skewed and complex redistribution exercise of India’s fiscal tax revenues. The GST regime will ensure a cleaner way to administer and collect indirect taxes but will not impact the skewed redistribution.

Also Read: Farm Loan Waivers To Touch 2% Of India’s GDP Before 2019 Polls

At a time when regional pride is being stoked in the rich states of Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and Maharashtra, this continued skew in redistribution of tax revenues can potentially erupt into an emotive issue. Economic, political, demographic and social disparity among India’s states is much starker today than in the early years of the republic.

If strong regional political parties that cater exclusively to voters of their own state held forth in Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Karnataka, like they do in Tamil Nadu, India’s economic union can be severely tested.

It is no coincidence that Tamil Nadu has witnessed a spate of recent protests against everything that seemingly threatens its identity. It may be tempting to interpret the economic disparity among India’s states as a case for more redistribution from the richer to the poorer states. But given India’s unique political and social diversity, it will likely be counter-productive with adverse consequences. The time has come to let India’s states determine their own destinies, fiscally and politically.



Praveen Chakravarty is a Senior Fellow at IDFC Institute, a Mumbai-based think/do tank. His work focuses on financial sector legislation & political economy. Noise to Signal will bring you insights from that.

The author is immensely thankful to HowIndiaLives, a big data startup, for data and research support .

The views expressed here are those of the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.

www.bloombergquint.com/opinion/2017/05/29/the-protesting-tamil-farmer-pays-for-the-up-farmers-loan-waiver.amp

@SrNair We should let the poor people of the South die. Let our North Indian masters bleed us dry like the British.

@Levina @Sinopakfriend @Spring Onion @manlion @kvpak @Bharat Muslim @IndoCarib
@Infinity @maximuswarrior @salarsikander

BS .
UP govt is waiving loans using their own UP ites funds not centres .
TN has a lots of soap programs like freelaptop etc and recently the pressure on TN budget of that waste programs has been revealed.
Oh please dont talk about Maharashtra .
You guys have crores of fund for investing in construction of Shivaji statue but not for that poor farmers in Vidharbha.So blame yourselves not others.
 
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BS .
UP govt is waiving loans using their own UP ites funds not centres .
TN has a lots of soap programs like freelaptop etc and recently the pressure on TN budget of that waste programs has been revealed.
Oh please dont talk about Maharashtra .
You guys have crores of fund for investing in construction of Shivaji statue but not for that poor farmers in Vidharbha.So blame yourselves not others.
This article is written by an expert. You haven't even read it completely.

You need to read my above post. And go through the video mentioned in the news which I could not embed in here.

BJP decided to construct the statue on its own. It did not conduct a referendum. Majority Marathis were against it.

All you care about is your North Indian masters. Your tamilian cousins mean nothing to you. But these Bhaiyyas don't even consider you as a Human. Let alone an Indian. Shame!
 
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Don't know the farmers in India pay taxes ,or the header wrong .
 
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Don't know the farmers in India pay taxes ,or the header wrong .
Everybody pays tax some people don't pay income tax. But from buying biscuit to petrol. Everybody pays tax for every damn thing.

Highways are sold, road tax, registration charge for prop, sale tax service tax. There are many more.
 
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Everybody pays tax some people don't pay income tax. But from buying biscuit to petrol. Everybody pays tax for every damn thing.

Highways are sold, road tax, registration charge for prop, sale tax service tax. There are many more.
Yes you are right.
But most of the taxes in India come from urban centers,for instance bangalore and other urban areas nearly contribute most of the taxes in karnataka.
 
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Visit the link. I could not embed the video.
There is a video of an economist explaining the situation.

UP government's revenue are too low to finance the waiver. It's using the money allocated from the central government. Central Gov is using revenues of other states to favor Hindi belt.

Every govt has money allocated from Central govt. Most of the states are told to generate their own revenue from taxes, companies, land deeds etc etc
Now if a state defaults on a loan, then they needs to accept financial recommendations to rectify their financial structure if they need to get a bail-outs. Same like IMF bail outing Pakistan for which conditions apply.

Infact with GST coming in, southern states revenue will shoot up. On some industries, the share of taxes of state is 50%, and for some products the state share is 100%. Then from the overall share collected from a state, some fixed % of money is given back to the same state.

The last model of GST model was radically different from the first. I am not denying Hindi states are milking others. Infact eating a lot of money meant for development of NE as well. But lets not be arrogant of developing. Let them develop too.

I really hope instead of farm waivers money should be used to link rivers. I dont understand farm waiver for a water rich state like UP.
 
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I really hope instead of farm waivers money should be used to link rivers. I dont understand farm waiver for a water rich state like UP.
UP does not have a agri crisis like Maharashtra,Karnataka and Tamil Nad.
They have the highest population. And They are good at reproducing. More votes.

The last model of GST model was radically different from the first. I am not denying Hindi states are milking others. Infact eating a lot of money meant for development of NE as well. But lets not be arrogant of developing. Let them develop too.
The relatively developed states were poor too. They developed their region on their own. Hindi belt has been getting free hand outs for last 67 years. The poor of western and southern states have been neglected.

The central govt used revenues of other states to implement green revolution in Punjab, Haryana and UP. The farmers of these region prospered at the expense farmers from western and southern states.

The modus operandi is very clear. Exploit other regions to develop North India.

If North India was seperate from South India. Even prosperous states like Punjab and harayana would be dirt poor

And south India including western states would be on the way to become 1st world countries by now.

You dont need to be an genius to see whats really happening in Indian union.
 
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UP does not have a agri crisis like Maharashtra,Karnataka and Tamil Nad.
They have the highest population. And They are good at reproducing. More votes.


The relatively developed states were poor too. They developed their region on their own. Hindi belt has been getting free hand outs for last 67 years. The poor of western and southern states have been neglected.

The central govt used revenues of other states to implement green revolution in Punjab, Haryana and UP. The farmers of these region prospered at the expense farmers from western and southern states.

The modus operandi is very clear. Exploit other regions to develop North India.

If North India was seperate from South India. Even prosperous states like Punjab and harayana would be dirt poor

And south India including western states would be on the way to become 1st world countries by now.

You dont need to be an genius to see whats really happening in Indian union.

Oh yeah. And South Indians faced the brunt of invasions and massacres right? The real pride is seeing all of India develop. Hell even some US provinces are dirt poor compared to more prosperous ones.

I am done talking to you.
 
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Thanks for alerting me to this excellent article

Great article but author devalued it by starting with a rather misleading intro to TN and UP farmers. I was so angry that centre paid the UP farmer loans but it was UP that did although eventually centre will pay the UP bil.

Brain washed people like @Rajaraja Chola or @SrNair would always kiss Hindi-an feet and blame their own people.
They will miss the point that an Tamilan who pays Rs 100 in central tax gets Rs 34 back and Hindi-an UP fellow who pays Rs 100 gets back Rs 161.

It is in the graph and article but these brain washed people turn traitor to their own people. I pity them although I feel angry to slap them hard.
 
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Oh yeah. And South Indians faced the brunt of invasions and massacres right? The real pride is seeing all of India develop. Hell even some US provinces are dirt poor compared to more prosperous ones.

I am done talking to you.
Let's blame the mediveal invaders for backwardness of the North Indians haha. 200 years of British rule. 67 years of North Indian rule in Indian union.

No one invaded them for past 267 years. But let's make excuses for them.

Thanks for alerting me to this excellent article

Great article but author devalued it by starting with a rather misleading intro to TN and UP farmers. I was so angry that centre paid the UP farmer loans but it was UP that did although eventually centre will pay the UP bil.

Brain washed people like @Rajaraja Chola or @SrNair would always kiss Hindi-an feet and blame their own people.
They will miss the point that an Tamilan who pays Rs 100 in central tax gets Rs 34 back and Hindi-an UP fellow who pays Rs 100 gets back Rs 161.

It is in the graph and article but these brain washed people turn traitor to their own people. I pity them although I feel angry to slap them hard.
This is why North Indians are behaving like the British. These guys watch too much bollywood. They think dumb and smelly North Indians are better than them. Because they are bit fairer. They dream of marrying an inbred Punjabi bimbo. Good luck with that!

They have never been to the North to see for themselves how useless these North Indians are.
 
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