Aamader Malda BLOG

aamadermalda.blog.com

A free newspaper from ABP soon

ABP, which publishes Ananda Bazaar Patrika and The Telegraph, is in talks with Swedish media firm Metro International to launch its free urban newspaper, Metro, in the country.

ABP is reported to be in the advanced stage of talks with the group, which is expected to take 26 per cent equity stake in the venture.

ABP managing director Pramath Raj Sinha refused to comment on the company’s foray into the compact-size paper market in partnership with the Swedish company.

However, sources said ABP was close to an agreement with the overseas firm, which launched Metro in Stockholm in 1995.

Metro was started by Metro International after a study revealed that the young and affluent consumers in Sweden were not reading national newspapers due to lack of time.

The compact daily was launched as a colourful, on-the-go newspaper which provided information in a succinct manner. After its success in several cities in Sweden, Metro International started editions across Europe, first in Prague and then in Hungary.

Inspired by its success, the paper was also launched in the UK in 1999 by Daily Mail and General Trust subsidiary Associated Newspapers, which publishes Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday and Evening Standard.

Associated Newspaper has signed a 26 per cent equity deal with the India. Today group for launching its tabloid, Daily Mail, in India recently.

Commenting on the prospects of free newspaper in India, Sameer Kapoor, president, Metropolitan Media Company (the Times group and HT Media Media JV), said, “Distribution is the key in the free newspaper market and if the concept can work in Europe and Singapore, I don’t see why it can’t work in India. Every potential compact or tabloid newspaper player in the business is eyeing the growing commuter traffic in cities.”

Metropolitan Media publishes a tabloid, Metro Now, in Delhi.

Source:

Buy CFC-free Inhalers, Asthma and COPD Patients Advised

asthma-inhaler
Surinder Singh has advised patients with asthma and chronic bronchitis to adopt environment-friendly CFC-free inhalers.

Addressing a workshop titled “Phasing out CFC in Metered Dose Inhalers”, Mr Singh said, “Environment-friendly asthma and COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases) inhalers are being introduced across the country as phasing out of CFCs has been aimed at by January 2010.”

Inhalers will now use HydroFluoroAlkane (HFA) propellant following India’s signature to the Montreal

protocol, which calls for replacing CFCs with environment friendly alternatives. “Research has shown that the HFA solution produce very small particles which penetrate the small airway in the lung better than the older CFC formulation,” Singh added.

CFC-free inhalers will not only protect the ozone, but also offer effective relief to the estimated 300 million people suffering from asthma and over 210 million suffering from COPD.

Source-Medindia
RAS

Sensex @ 21000 in 2010?

Madhu Kela of Reliance MF, Nilesh Shah of ICICI Pru AMC and Ajit Dayal of Quantum AMC believes Sensex will hit new high in 2010. I tend to agree with them. I had mentioned in my earlier post of Indian economy growing by atleast 8% in FY11 which I see as one of the reason for the index hitting new high as GST, Oil & Gas Discoveries and Global recovery boost the earnings of the Sensex companies. The added trigger could be the de-control of oil prices since the election is now over. Even if oil prices are not decontrolled completely but raised around the market prices, subsidy burden of ONGC will ease considerably and boost its earnings. ICICI Bank business should have undergone a significant change with focus on CASA,NIMs and ROE while bank’s lending should pick up after the consolidation. HDFC and HDFC Bank will continue with their 20%+ and 30%+ earnings growth. With the capital inflows coming back into the country, Real-estate players will start raising money through equities and pay back the debt to the Indian banks. This will ensure that the restructured assets have not turned bad. SBI & ICICI Bank will be the biggest beneficiaries. L&T might demerge some of its subsidiaries while its infrastructure business continues to deliver 25% earnings growth. BHEL too should continue to deliver 20-25% growth. US economy is expected to recover by the end of 2009 which should lead to increased spending by the US companies. Infy,TCS and Wipro will benefit from the same but the rupee appreciation will take off some sheen. Defensives like Telecom and FMCG should as usual deliver 15%+ growth . Metals will rebound as global economy recovers. Autos could be under stress as interest rates rise and commodities shoot up so growth could be around 10% in this sector.

If the global recovery happens by the end of 2009, Sensex FY11 EPS and FY12 EPS should be around Rs 1090 and Rs 1250 respectively which markets will start discounting by the end of 2010. At the one-year forward PE of around 17, Sensex does have a high probability of hitting new high. Inflation and Commodities prices remain a risk on the downside.

 

 

- http://deveshkayal.wordpress.com/

Can India’s economy overtake China?

By Paranjoy Guha Thakurta ,Indian economic analyst

In 2010, the Indian economy may grow faster than that of China. What is more, experts contend that South Asia could expand at a more rapid pace than East Asia.

While there is no dearth of sceptics who believe that China will continue to grow faster than any other major economy on the globe in the foreseeable future, there are others who contend that the trend growth rates of the two most populous nations could change and that India could march ahead of the Chinese economy just a little faster than many predict.

China and India, accounting for roughly 40% of the 6.5bn plus people on Planet Earth, are not merely the two fastest growing major economies in the world at present, but are among the few countries that have continued to expand at a time when the economies of most countries have contracted.

 The economy of India started accelerating from the early 1990s onwards as Delhi loosened bureaucratic controls over industry, trade and services

In the early 1950s, in terms of per capita income and levels of economic development, there was little to distinguish between China and India. Half the populations of both countries were mired in abject poverty - in India’s case after centuries of colonial rule.

From the 1970s, the Chinese economy started growing at a fast rate while India’s economy grew sluggishly at an average rate of growth of 3.5% - sarcastically described by the late economics professor Raj Krishna as the “Hindu rate of growth”.

As China grew by double-digits decade after decade for nearly 40 years, economists kept claiming the bubble would burst, that data was doctored by smart statisticians in Beijing - but the metaphorical dragon continued to grow bigger and bigger defying all expectations.

The economy of India, on the other hand, started accelerating from the early 1990s onwards as Delhi loosened bureaucratic controls over industry, trade and services.

In the middle of the 1990s, for the first time since India became independent in August 1947, the country’s economy expanded by an annual average of more than 9% four years in succession, that is until the impact of the ongoing international recession saw the Indian economy decelerate.

Economists argue that one reason why India’s economy can grow faster than that of China in the near future is simply on account of what statisticians describe as a “base effect”.

Following this argument, India’s growth rate is higher because the base on which the rate is calculated is narrower.

China’s economy is roughly three and a half times bigger than that of India - Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measured in US dollars in 2008 for the two countries stood at $4.2 trillion and $1.2 trillion respectively.

But there is an important reason why India’s economy has been hurt relatively less by the ongoing international economic recession in comparison to China, whose growth has been largely export-driven in recent decades.

Exports and imports put together (including “invisible” earnings from tourists, workers’ remittances and exports of services) account for approximately half of India’s GDP whereas the comparable proportion for China is over 80%.

Forecasts revised

Two years ago, China overtook the US as India’s largest trading partner.

In late June, the World Bank in its Global Development Finance 2009 report projected that in 2010, the rate of growth of India’s economy at 8% would be faster than that of China, expected to be 7.7%.

The bank’s forecast for the current year was revised upwards for both China (from 6.5% to 7.2%) and India (from 4% to 5.1%) but these prognostications are lower than those made by the governments of the respective countries.

The Chinese government claims a rate of growth close to 8% for 2009, while various agencies of the Indian government would place the comparable figure at somewhere between 6.5% and 7%.

The bank report pointed out that the growth rate of all developing countries taken together had come down from 8.1% in 2007 to 5.9% in 2008 and is expected to be only 1.2% this calendar year.

“When China and India are excluded, GDP (gross domestic product) in the remaining developing countries is expected to fall by 1.6%, causing continued job losses and throwing more people into poverty,” the World Bank report stated.

JustThe World Bank predicts India will grow by 8% in 2010

in Lin, the bank’s chief economist, was quoted as saying that developing countries could “become a key driving force” in reviving the world’s economy, “assuming their domestic investments rebound with international support, including a resumption in the flow of international credit”.

Mr Lin is not alone. Speaking at a recent seminar in Delhi, Ajay Chibber, Assistant Secretary General of the UN’s Development Programme, said it would have unthinkable until recently that India could grow faster than China.

“I never thought I would see it during my lifetime but South Asia could grow faster than East Asia,” he remarked.

Kalpana Kochhar, deputy director of the Asia Pacific department of the International Monetary Fund, told me that it was no longer improbable that India could grow faster than China or that South Asia would expand at a faster pace than East and South-East Asia.

“I see these as distinct possibilities,” she said.

Most babies born this century will live to 100

Most babies born in rich countries this century will eventually make it to their 100th birthday, new research says. Danish experts say that since the 20th century, people in developed countries are living about three decades longer than in the past. Surprisingly, the trend shows little sign of slowing down.

In an article published Friday in the medical journal Lancet, the researchers write that the process of aging may be “modifiable.”

James Vaupel of the Max Planck Institute in Germany and colleagues in Denmark examined studies published globally in 2004-2005 on numerous issues related to aging. They found life expectancy is increasing steadily in most countries, even beyond the limits of what scientists first thought possible. In Japan, for instance, which has the world’s longest life expectancy, more than half of the country’s 80-year-old women are expected to live to 90.

“Improvements in health care are leading to ever slowing rates of aging, challenging the idea that there is a fixed ceiling to human longevity,” said David Gems, an aging expert at University College London. Gems was not connected to the research, and is studying drugs that can lengthen the life span of mice, which may one day have applications for people.

“Laboratory studies of mice, including our own, demonstrate that if you slow aging even just a little, it has a strong protective effect,” he said. “A pill that slowed aging could provide protection against the whole gamut of aging-related diseases.”

While illnesses affecting the elderly like heart disease, cancer and diabetes are rising, advances in medical treatment are also making it possible for them to remain active for longer. The obesity epidemic, however, may complicate matters. Extra weight makes people more susceptible to diseases and may increase their risk of dying.

In the U.S., data from 1982 to 2000 showed a major drop in illness and disability among the elderly, though that has now begun to reverse, probably linked to the rise in obesity.

The graying population will slowly radically transform society, and retirement ages may soon be pushed back, said Richard Suzman, an aging expert at the U.S. National Institute on Aging.

“We are within five to 10 years of a watershed event where there will be more people on earth over 65 than there under five,” he said. “Those extra years need to be financed somehow and we need to start thinking about it now.”

____

On the Net:

www.lancet.com

আমাদের মালদা

মালদা জেলায় সর্বাধিক প্রচারিত প্রথম শ্রেণির বাংলা মাসিক পত্রিকা I AAMADER MALDA, a widely circulated Bengali Monthly Newspaper of Malda


RSS The Telegraph | North Bengal & Sikkim

  • Morcha chief blames Asok for absence
    Kalimpong, March 15: The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha president will not attend the first round of the political-level tripartite talks scheduled in New Delhi on Thursday because Bengal municipal affairs minister Asok Bhattacharya will be part of the state government delegation.
  • Talks on hill teachers' demands
    Siliguri, March 15: Bengal school education minister Partha Dey and the teachers' wing of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha will hold a meeting in Calcutta tomorrow to discuss its demands, but the union said its threat to abstain from supervising the Higher Secondary exams would be reconsidered depending on the outcome of the talks.
  • Police track militant's Kurseong stay
    Siliguri, March 15: The Manipuri militant leader arrested near here yesterday along with three women had been staying in Kurseong for the past four-and-a-half years, Darjeeling police have said.

RSS BBC News | World Edition

  • US presses Israel on settler row March 15, 2010
    The US says it is awaiting a formal response from Israel amid a row over its decision to build new homes in East Jerusalem.
  • FBI to investigate Mexico deaths March 15, 2010
    The FBI says it is sending agents to Mexico's border city of Ciudad Juarez after three people linked to the US consulate were killed.
  • Winslet and Mendes split March 15, 2010
    Actress Kate Winslet and her husband, film director Sam Mendes, split up earlier this year, their lawyers announce.

RSS Daily News & Analysis

  • Pankaj Advani triumphs in a thriller March 15, 2010
    Pankaj Advani claimed his 20th National title on Monday when he beat West Bengal's Brijesh Damani 8-7 in the inaugural Six-red Snooker National Championship here on Tuesday.
  • Sunil Chetri set to make US Major League Soccer debut March 15, 2010
    The Delhi lad appeared for trials at the club earlier this month and it is believed that Chetri will join the American club in a couple of weeks' time and be a part of their campaign.
  • Mumbai FC marginal favourites March 15, 2010
    Local outfit has the edge against Chirag United who will be without striker Edmilson and defender Eduardo.

RSS Reuters: Top News

  • Sen Dodd boosts Fed in new financial reforms March 15, 2010
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve would take on a greatly expanded role in financial regulation under new legislation unveiled on Monday by a top Senate Democrat, in a push to move ahead with the regulatory reform that has been a top priority of President Barack Obama.
  • Toyota says no evidence "runaway" Prius happened March 15, 2010
    SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp said on Monday it had found no evidence to support the driver's version of a widely publicized "runaway" Prius episode a week ago, suggesting that authorities examine whether the incident happened as reported to police.
  • Jobs bill nears final OK in Congress March 15, 2010
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The first of several Democratic job-creation efforts cleared a procedural hurdle in the Senate on Monday and appeared to be headed toward final congressional approval.

RSS The Times of India

  • Terror duo sings: Mumbai strike averted in nick of time March 15, 2010
    The two terror suspects arrested over the weekend planned to set fire to the ONGC office at Bandra (East) on March 15, cops said. Police have issued a warning to all pumps not to sell loose fuel to any customers, especially those who don’t have vehicles.
  • Will IITs, IIMs fall victim to poaching by foreign universities? March 15, 2010
    With the govt paving the way for foreign universities to set up campuses in India, it can only mean one thing: poorly-paid academic superstars of the country's top institutes can finally expect to get value for their worship.
  • Fearing Maoist revenge, states put on alert March 15, 2010
    Govt has asked all naxal-affected states to remain alert hinting that Maoists were up to something big to take revenge for the arrest of four big naxal leaders in two operations and seizure of over 2,800 kg explosives.

Visitors No.

Hit Counters

RSS Hindustan Times: Business

Our Tweets

  • Sorry, Twitter is down