• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Serious Very Hungry Lunch Stealing Talents Coming

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
India's poor fight desperate battle to find work as slowdown bites
6 December 2019, 3:45 AM GMT+7
The hunt for work becomes more desperate every day on Delhi's street corner labour markets as India's economic slowdown bites deeper, piling pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi just half a year into his second term.
With the central bank cutting interest rates five times this year -- but on Thursday unable to lower them any further because of high inflation -- patience was running thin at the "labour Chowk", or market, in the packed, narrow streets of Old Delhi.
Among the hundreds of painters, electricians, carpenters and plumbers who anxiously gather at dawn each day, 55-year-old painter Tehseen has been a regular for three decades. But he is despondent.
His monthly income has slumped from about $350 to $140 in the past three years. He is at least still earning. The unemployment rate, currently about 8.5 percent, has hit a four-decade high in the past two years.
Tehseen blames government efforts to eradicate the tax-avoiding "unofficial economy". A government survey this year estimated that more than 90 percent of the workforce are "unofficial".
Modi stunned the country in November 2016 by cancelling more than 80 percent of the bank notes in circulation, and the introduction a year later of a nationwide goods and services tax dealt a new blow to business confidence.
Last week, official figures showed the economy grew just 4.5 percent in the second quarter, the slowest rate in six years. Modi's rightwing government is struggling to convince the public that it has the answers to the slowdown.
"Companies have suffered since the note ban," said Tehseen.
"They do not want to think about getting their offices renovated when they have no business. We have to bear the brunt now."
Raju, a labour market carpenter for 20 years, said he now goes for days on end without a job offer.
"The work and the money are 50 percent down on what I used to get," he said.
And lower wages means a harder time to get a meal on the table.
- In trouble and worried -
At the Old Delhi food market, Zarina Begum said she sometimes goes home with her bags empty. "The vegetables are just too expensive," said the 50-year-old housewife.
On bad days her children get a meal of pulses, or chickpea flour with oil.
Raj Kumar used to sell a meal of lentils and vegetables in his nearby restaurant for the equivalent of 56 US cents. But increased costs means he now asks 70 cents and sales have taken a hit.
"I had to increase prices to keep up with expenses. But people just don't have the money," he said.
Sandip Jain, a 45-year-old stone mason, said people might have a good opinion of Modi but they are disappointed with his handling of the economy.
"Every businessman is in trouble and is worried. Those who ended their day with an income of 700 rupees (10 dollars) are now down to 270," he said.
Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has announced reforms, including easing restrictions on foreign investment and cutting corporate taxes. But that does little to boost public confidence in a country where hundreds of millions live barely on poverty wages.
The multi-nation Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development stepped up pressure on Modi on Thursday by calling for India to bring down trade barriers and reform its "complex" labour laws that discourage hiring.
"Consumption has fallen because of the breakdown of the labour market," Ram Kumar of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences told AFP.
He said Modi has given incentives to the private sector but companies have not responded and the economy was now worsening because the government "avoids" questions on the slowdown.
Economist Sameer Narang said the government had to see through its privatisation and other reforms but warned "it will be a slow recovery for India from here on".
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Well, they had the money for a space program. :cool:
Indeed your pinky built a giant garden and an indoor waterfall. Don't tell me you so hard up not to give the minions a little fat bonus before going into the elections. :unsure:
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
I was just about to say, they should revert back to using cash. Modi banned big notes making this difficult.
 

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
New hunger games in jobless Bharat
Sayantan Bera
Hunger games in jobless Bharat. Photos: Sayantan Bera/Mint
Hunger games in jobless Bharat. Photos: Sayantan Bera/Mint
CHITRAKOOT/PANNA : It is well past 2 in the afternoon, but the wall clock hanging in Seema’s bare room is stuck at 10.15am. But that is not the reason why this mother of a month-old child, is yet to have a morsel of food. A meal—rotis or wheat flatbread, and a deep red and watery curry with potatoes floating in it—has been cooked. But Seema is waiting for her husband to get back home. By eating late, she will “save" a meal. That will help buy some milk for her other child, a two-year-old girl.
The thatched roof of the single-room m&d house in Dafai, a village in Chitrakoot district of Uttar Pradesh, is pockmarked with holes. Seema’s husband Sanjay, a graduate, works as a casual worker in and around the village. But it has been difficult to find work of late. At times Sanjay earns just ₹100 a day working as a porter or a construction labourer; on most days even that paltry sum eludes him. Therefore, the family’s spending on food was cut drastically.
Seema, a young mother from Chitrakoot, skips meals to save and purchase milk for her two-year-old daughter
Seema, a young mother from Chitrakoot, skips meals to save and purchase milk for her two-year-old daughter
Seema’s two-year-old daughter has a diet of rotis with salt. The girl is yet to bite into fruit, any fruit. Staples like pulses are cooked rarely and the family seldom buys vegetables other than potatoes or tomatoes. “My life now revolves around paanch rupiya ka tel aur du rupiya ka masala ( ₹5 worth of oil and ₹2 worth of spices)," said Seema.
Consumption slowdown
Last week, as the winter crept into the arid Bundelkhand region spread across the states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, Mint travelled to three districts, Chitrakoot, Banda and Panna. The idea was to take stock of the kitchens of landless households dependent on casual work, the most vulnerable among all occupational groups.
After a collapse in rural incomes and a de-growth in causal wages—heightened by the ban on high-value currency notes in end 2016—a recent National Statistical Office (NSO) survey report leaked by Business Standard showed a significant 9% drop in rural consumption, including on staples, between 2011-12 and 2017-18. The last time a fall in consumption was recorded was half a century ago in the early 1970s.
The Bharatiya Janata Party-led central government was quick to disregard the survey by NSO. Drawing on numbers from the report, the Plain Facts team at Mint estimated a 4% jump in rural poverty during this period—or an estimated 30 million people slipping below the official poverty line of ₹26 per person per day (at 2011-12 prices). The leaked report and subsequent analyses put a number to the tragedy that has been unfolding in rural India for some years now.
Children of Ram Sevak, a casual worker from Banda who committed suicide last week after being jobless for more than three months
Children of Ram Sevak, a casual worker from Banda who committed suicide last week after being jobless for more than three months
Data released earlier this year showed that unemployment was at a four-decade high in 2017-18; over 17% of rural men in the 15-29 age group were unemployed, triple the number in 2011-12. With access of jobs and food worsening, there have been frequent reports of starvation deaths from Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand. Burdened by debt, disasters and low crop prices, farmers and wage earners from richer states like Maharashtra and Punjab have been taking their own lives.
The distress today is palpable despite the country witnessing record harvests of grains and pulses between 2017 and 2019. And the ground reality of a lactating mother like Seema starving herself to save on a meal is ironic and sad—the central government’s foodgrain stocks are overflowing (an excess of 30 million tonnes over buffer norms) but there is little effort on its part to extend the food safety net.
Seema’s family is excluded from the subsidized food scheme that guarantees a modest 5kg of grain per person per month under the National Food Security Act, 2013. In Dafai there has been no survey since 2016 to include new beneficiaries. Newly married women and young children have been left out, pushing families to the brink of starvation.
At a primary school in Banda, Uttar Pradesh, nutrition content in midday meals often falls short of prescribed norms
At a primary school in Banda, Uttar Pradesh, nutrition content in midday meals often falls short of prescribed norms
The situation is made worse by inadequate supplementary nutrition schemes offered in centrally fundedAnganwadis (child care centres) and pilferage in midday meals for school children. The latest spike in retail food inflation driven by a rise in prices of vegetables, onions and milk —a 10% increase year-on-year in November—hasn’t helped matters, pushing families to the brink. Seema wanted to study but was married off; now she is unsure if her children will ever step into a school.
 

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
Unemployment in India was at a 45-year high in 2017-18, according to PLFS data. The crisis was more acute in urban areas (7.8%) than in rural (5.3%). In its defence, prime minister Narendra Modi’s government has said that due to some changes in methodology, the numbers are not comparable with the previous year’s.


Data from other sources have also confirmed the bleak employment scenario.
A report by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), a Mumbai based think-tank, published earlier this year had also found that qualified youth—those with bachelor’s degrees and above—faced the highest unemployment.
The jobs crisis among educated youth has often been described as a ticking time bomb, given that half of India’s 1.3 billion population is below the age of 25.
 

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore, India signed CECA: A More Liberal Agreement Than Chinese CSFTA
By
EurAsian Times
November 27, 2019
India and Singapore signed CECA – India-Singapore Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement in 2005. This free trade agreement (CECA) not only enables Singapore and India to trade goods freely, it also allows professionals to work in each other country more easily.
The CECA was concluded after 13 rounds of negotiation and the Singapore’s side was led by none other than Heng Swee Keat, the current PM-in-waiting, who was then Permanent Secretary for Trade and Industry. Heng and his team essentially did the ground work together with their Indian counterparts. They then presented their proposals to the politicians for approval.
China signed CSFTA with Singapore, however CECA seems to be a more liberal and open-handed agreement according to experts. In 2009, the China-Singapore Free Trade Agreement (CSFTA) came into force. This is China’s first comprehensive bilateral FTA with an Asian country.
China is Singapore’s largest trading partner while Singapore is China’s largest foreign investor since 2013. In 2017, Singapore’s cumulative investment in China amounted to S$140 billion while China’s cumulative investment in Singapore amounted to S$36.3 billion.
Under the agreement, both countries are allowed to facilitate the free “movement of natural persons” to each other country. It facilitates temporary entry of natural persons for the purpose of trade while recognising the need to ensure border security and to protect the domestic labour force in the territories of both parties.
In essence, the agreement facilitates the movement of the following people like business visitors; Contractual services suppliers and Intra-corporate transferees.
Under the agreement, Singapore will allow a Chinese business visitor to stay for a period of up to 60 days with extension for further 30 days. This is for Chinese holders of 5-year multiple journey visa. For holders of all other visas, Singapore will grant the right to temporary entry for a period of up to 30 days, which may be extended for a further 30 days.

In contrast, Singapore is more generous to India when comes to CECA. Under CECA, Indian business visitors with a 5-year multiple journey visa are granted temporary entry for a period of up to two months with further extension for another. Those with less than 5-year multiple journey visa are granted temporary entry for a period of up to one month.
For contractual services suppliers and intra-corporate transferees, the terms are similar to that of CSFTA. The only difference is that for CECA’s intra-corporate transferees, they must have been employed by the company for not less than 6 months before he or she can be qualified for the transfer to the host country.
In the CSFTA agreement, In the case of contractual services suppliers, the person must have been a PMET(Professionals, Managers, Executives and Technicians) employee of the service supplier for at least 1 year preceding the date of their application for admission. Entry is limited to 90 days with possibility for a further extension of up to 90 days, provided the total does not exceed 180 days or the length of the service contract, whichever is shorter.
That is, the maximum stay allowed in Singapore is 6 months for Chinese PMET on contract to provide a service in Singapore by his or her service supplier in China.
For intra-corporate transferees, the person must have been in the prior employ of their firms outside Singapore for a minimum of 1 year preceding the date of their application for admission. Their stay is limited to 2 years but can be extended for periods of up to 3 additional years each time, for a total term of not more than 8 years.
The professional is essentially contracted to work in the host country for up to 1 year. Since nothing is said in the agreement denying the professional’s renewal of his or her contract, it is presumed that he or she can continue to work in the host country to “finish up” the contracted work as long as the contract is continually renewed by the the business party who is actively engaging the professional in the host country.
CECA also specified 127 different occupations that the professional can engage in the host country as long as they have equivalent degrees conferred by institutions in India and Singapore. And under CECA, intra-corporate transferees as well as “long-term temporary entry” professionals are allowed to bring in their spouses or dependants into the host country. They are allowed to “work as managers, executives or specialists, subject to the relevant licensing, administrative and registration requirements”.
“Such spouses or dependents can apply independently in their own capacity (and not necessarily as accompanying spouses or dependents) and shall not be barred by the Party granting them the right to work from taking up employment in a category other than that of managers, executives, or specialists solely on the ground that they as the accompanying spouses or dependents are already employed in its territory as managers, executives or specialists,” CECA stated. In other words, the spouses or dependents can work in non-PMET jobs in the host country.
Clauses relating to the employment of “long-term temporary entry” professionals as well as employment of spouses or dependents are not found in the same chapter (“movement of natural persons”) in CSFTA. Only CECA has them.
We can owe the generosity to the strong and friendly bilateral relations with both the countries enjoying extensive cultural and commercial. Singapore and India have a common goal that is increase trade, investments and economic cooperation, and expanded bilateral cooperation on maritime security, training forces, joint naval exercises, developing military technology and fighting terrorism through CECA.
More than 300,000 people of Indian origin live in Singapore. Following its independence in 1965, Singapore was concerned with China-backed communist threats as well as domination from Malaysia and Indonesia and sought a close strategic relationship with India, which it saw as a counterbalance to Chinese influence and a partner in achieving regional security. Singapore had always been an important strategic trading post, giving India trade access to the Far East.
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Time to reassess this incompetent to be PM soon.

CAQ shd be voted out this GE saved taxpayers hving to pay him for his senior minister post bullshit....
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
New hunger games in jobless Bharat
Sayantan Bera
Hunger games in jobless Bharat. Photos: Sayantan Bera/Mint
Hunger games in jobless Bharat. Photos: Sayantan Bera/Mint
CHITRAKOOT/PANNA : It is well past 2 in the afternoon, but the wall clock hanging in Seema’s bare room is stuck at 10.15am. But that is not the reason why this mother of a month-old child, is yet to have a morsel of food. A meal—rotis or wheat flatbread, and a deep red and watery curry with potatoes floating in it—has been cooked. But Seema is waiting for her husband to get back home. By eating late, she will “save" a meal. That will help buy some milk for her other child, a two-year-old girl.
The thatched roof of the single-room m&d house in Dafai, a village in Chitrakoot district of Uttar Pradesh, is pockmarked with holes. Seema’s husband Sanjay, a graduate, works as a casual worker in and around the village. But it has been difficult to find work of late. At times Sanjay earns just ₹100 a day working as a porter or a construction labourer; on most days even that paltry sum eludes him. Therefore, the family’s spending on food was cut drastically.
Seema, a young mother from Chitrakoot, skips meals to save and purchase milk for her two-year-old daughter
Seema, a young mother from Chitrakoot, skips meals to save and purchase milk for her two-year-old daughter
Seema’s two-year-old daughter has a diet of rotis with salt. The girl is yet to bite into fruit, any fruit. Staples like pulses are cooked rarely and the family seldom buys vegetables other than potatoes or tomatoes. “My life now revolves around paanch rupiya ka tel aur du rupiya ka masala ( ₹5 worth of oil and ₹2 worth of spices)," said Seema.
Consumption slowdown
Last week, as the winter crept into the arid Bundelkhand region spread across the states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, Mint travelled to three districts, Chitrakoot, Banda and Panna. The idea was to take stock of the kitchens of landless households dependent on casual work, the most vulnerable among all occupational groups.
After a collapse in rural incomes and a de-growth in causal wages—heightened by the ban on high-value currency notes in end 2016—a recent National Statistical Office (NSO) survey report leaked by Business Standard showed a significant 9% drop in rural consumption, including on staples, between 2011-12 and 2017-18. The last time a fall in consumption was recorded was half a century ago in the early 1970s.
The Bharatiya Janata Party-led central government was quick to disregard the survey by NSO. Drawing on numbers from the report, the Plain Facts team at Mint estimated a 4% jump in rural poverty during this period—or an estimated 30 million people slipping below the official poverty line of ₹26 per person per day (at 2011-12 prices). The leaked report and subsequent analyses put a number to the tragedy that has been unfolding in rural India for some years now.
Children of Ram Sevak, a casual worker from Banda who committed suicide last week after being jobless for more than three months
Children of Ram Sevak, a casual worker from Banda who committed suicide last week after being jobless for more than three months
Data released earlier this year showed that unemployment was at a four-decade high in 2017-18; over 17% of rural men in the 15-29 age group were unemployed, triple the number in 2011-12. With access of jobs and food worsening, there have been frequent reports of starvation deaths from Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand. Burdened by debt, disasters and low crop prices, farmers and wage earners from richer states like Maharashtra and Punjab have been taking their own lives.
The distress today is palpable despite the country witnessing record harvests of grains and pulses between 2017 and 2019. And the ground reality of a lactating mother like Seema starving herself to save on a meal is ironic and sad—the central government’s foodgrain stocks are overflowing (an excess of 30 million tonnes over buffer norms) but there is little effort on its part to extend the food safety net.
Seema’s family is excluded from the subsidized food scheme that guarantees a modest 5kg of grain per person per month under the National Food Security Act, 2013. In Dafai there has been no survey since 2016 to include new beneficiaries. Newly married women and young children have been left out, pushing families to the brink of starvation.
At a primary school in Banda, Uttar Pradesh, nutrition content in midday meals often falls short of prescribed norms
At a primary school in Banda, Uttar Pradesh, nutrition content in midday meals often falls short of prescribed norms
The situation is made worse by inadequate supplementary nutrition schemes offered in centrally fundedAnganwadis (child care centres) and pilferage in midday meals for school children. The latest spike in retail food inflation driven by a rise in prices of vegetables, onions and milk —a 10% increase year-on-year in November—hasn’t helped matters, pushing families to the brink. Seema wanted to study but was married off; now she is unsure if her children will ever step into a school.
They are poor n yet they still breed. Talk about family n social responsibilities
 

whoami

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
India is rich. They are taking in all non muslim indians fm Bangla, Pakistan n Afghanistan n issue instant citizenship. Just like peesai island. Express citizenship easy as toilet papers
 
Last edited:
Top