As the U.S.-India trade dispute escalates and global alliances shift, Washington faces a choice: lead through openness or risk driving the world toward alternative systems
Author: Krishnakumar S.
If Trump continues his policy of economic isolation, the current dominance of America’s “Magnificent 7” — Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Tesla — will become a thing of the past
India bids adieu to former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on a rainy day
Washington also should have a liberal H-1B policy, without which labor costs are sure to rise.
Greater financial commitment from advanced nations needed to address urgent sustainability challenges
An institutional arrangement is needed for provision of dollar liquidity to prevent bank balance sheets going into disarray
Pundits ask as AAP tsunami sweeps Punjab and BJP scores big win in Uttar Pradesh
But is the steep decrease of the minimum global tax rate to 15% too much of a hard bargain?
Will the state buck the trend of voting out incumbent government in an election marked by array of fresh faces and convergence of ideologies?
RIL faces challenge of sustaining revenue increases in a deflating global economy.
Instead of offering itself as a low cost destination, India would do better to build upon its competencies.
But Judge David Waksman refuses to believe him, orders Anil Ambani to deposit $100 million six weeks.
In case of another Bernanke moment, India might be staring at an unprecedented crisis of sorts.
Think beyond openness as growth strategy in age of protectionism, suggests Deepak Nayyar.
The election is going to be a referendum on not just Modi, but Kejriwal as well.
Trump needs to take a call on whether the United States should have a strong dollar, or a current account surplus. He can’t have both.
The United States’ trade surplus with other countries on services increased roughly 400 percent over the past 13 years.
The conference’s failure has pushed the multilateral trading institution to the brink of a serious existential crisis.
A series of statements and actions of bureaucrats and those close to Modi undercutting his message.
But why is the government introducing 2,000 rupee notes, in a country where three-fourths of the people surviving on 20 per day?
