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India’s sugar exports may top 4 million tonnes

MUMBAI: Sugar exports from India, the world’s second-biggest producer after Brazil, is likely to exceed four million tonnes in the current crop year to September, one of the world’s leading trader said on Wednesday.

“I believe India has all the reasons to export more than 4 million tonnes sugar this year,” Adam Leetham, director of Czarnikow Sugar India Pvt Ltd, told Reuters. Indian trade officials have estimated the country’s exports in the current year at around 3 million tonnes.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Indian vehicle makers post record annual sales

MUMBAI: Two top Indian vehicle makers Maruti Suzuki and Tata Motors reported record annual sales on Tuesday in one of the world’s fastest growing motoring markets, driven by strong economic growth and fatter salaries. Tata Motors, which last week announced the 2.3-billion-dollar purchase of luxury British car icons Jaguar and Land Rover, said sales rose by one percent to 582,401 vehicles for the fiscal year to March 2008.

These sales figures are the “highest ever by the company,” Tata Motors, part of the giant tea-to-steel conglomerate Tata Group, said in a statement. For the month of March, Tata, the country’s leading truckmaker, reported total sales, including exports, rose six percent to 66,495. The announcement by Tata came a day after the company and another leading Indian vehicle maker Mahindra and Mahindra separately announced they would invest a total of 75 billion rupees ($1.9 billion) to boost capacity. Tata said it would invest 60 billion rupees over the next four or five years while Mahindra plans to spend 15 billion rupees in addition to an earlier announced 25 billion rupees.

The latest announcements come on top of plans by global automakers such as General Motors and Volkswagen to invest in excess of six billion dollars to construct plants or raise capacity to meet the demands of India’s increasingly affluent consumers. Meanwhile, India’s largest carmaker Maruti Suzuki said sales in the fiscal year through to March jumped 13 percent to 764,842 vehicles. Maruti, majority owned by Japan’s Suzuki Motor and which commands the lion’s share of the fast-growing Indian car market, said in a statement that its Indian sales were “the highest ever in the history of the company.” afp

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India, Myanmar sign multimillion-dollar deal

Friday, April 04, 2008

NEW DELHI: India has agreed to build a multimillion-dollar (euro) seaport and transportation system in Myanmar as it presses ahead with investment in its much-criticized neighbour.

The agreement was signed on Wednesday by officials during a meeting between the second-highest member of Myanmar’s ruling junta, Vice Senior Gen Maung Aye, and Indian Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari, India’s Foreign Ministry said.

India has been investing in Myanmar despite international calls for sanctions on the Southeast Asian country’s military government, which violently suppressed pro-democracy protests several months ago.

A ministry statement gave no details of the deal. Earlier, Indian officials said India would upgrade waterways and highways along Myanmar’s Kaladan River and develop the port of Sittway in the country’s northwest in the US$120 million (euro81 million) project.

“This project will greatly enhance connectivity between Myanmar and India, in particular with India’s northeast states,” the ministry statement said.

India has established deep economic and military ties with Myanmar’s ruling junta over the past decade and has said it believes talking quietly is a better approach than sanctions.

During his six-day trip to India, Maung Aye has also met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who reiterated New Delhi’s commitment to support Myanmar in telecommunications and information technology, the statement said.

The general, whose visit ends on Saturday, said he appreciated India’s assistance with infrastructure projects, road construction, lines of credit and setting up an information technology centre in Myanmar, it said.

The agreement was signed the same day as detained Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s opposition party urged voters to reject a military-backed draft constitution, saying it was undemocratic and written under the junta’s direct control.

The charter will be voted on in a referendum next month. The junta has also announced general elections in 2010.

The Indian ministry’s statement quoted Prime Minister Singh as saying Myanmar needs to speed up its promised democratization process.

India shifted its policy from supporting Suu Kyi to engaging the junta’s generals in the early 1990s, partly because of a desire for access to Myanmar’s large natural gas reserves.

India, Myanmar sign multimillion-dollar deal
 
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India seen importing sugar by 2010/11: LMC

* India exported 1.7 million tonnes sugar last year​

MUMBAI: India, a key supplier of raws, may have to import sugar by 2010/11, a leading global consultancy said on Thursday, while a domestic brokerage said imports would happen sooner as domestic output drops.

Refineries around the world, especially in the Middle East started viewing India as a dependable supplier of raws as the country, saddled with huge domestic stocks, entered the raw sugar export market in June 2007, when it sold 500,000 tonnes.

After a record output of 28.4 million tonnes in the crop year to September 2007, output in India is likely to fall in the next two to three years as farmers shift from sugarcane to more profitable grains, traders said.

“India may have to import sugar in 2010/11 after exporting less in the next two seasons,” said Gareth Forber, head of sugar research at LMC International Ltd. He said India’s exports were expected to fall to about 2.5 million tonnes next crop year, one million tonnes lower than the estimated 3.5 million tonnes this year.

India, the world’s biggest sugar producer after Brazil, country exported 1.7 million tonnes last year. “India can manage to export some sugar in 2009/10 but may have to import in 2010/11,” Forber said.

Trade officials say India’s closing sugar stocks would be 9.8 million tonnes in September this year when the current season ends and will fall to 7.9 million tonnes next year. The government had allowed mills to import raw sugar between 2003 and 2004 but asked them to export refined sugar in the same quantity in lieu of duty-free imports of raws.

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Indian annual inflation seen at 6.62 percent

MUMBAI: India’s annual inflation rate is expected to remain close to a 14-month-high hit in mid-March due to higher food and fuel prices, a Reuters poll of 11 analysts showed on Thursday. The wholesale price index is forecast to have risen 6.62 percent in the 12 months to March 22, just off the previous week’s 6.68 percent, which was the highest reading since Jan. 27, 2007. Annual inflation was “unacceptably” high, Reserve Bank of India Governor Yaga Venugopal Reddy said earlier this week, adding the central bank was ready to act if necessary. The federal government, under pressure to check prices ahead of state polls this year and national elections due by next year, has cut import duties on edible oil and banned rice exports to curb inflation pressures.

The central bank had wanted to contain inflation near 5 percent at the end of the fiscal year that ended on March 31. The inflation data will be released around noon on Friday. The wholesale price index is more closely watched than the consumer price index (CPI) because it includes more products and is also published weekly.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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India tells Microsoft to pay $175m in tax

NEW DELHI: India has asked US software giant Microsoft to pay $175 million in back taxes and interest for revenue earned from licensing its software here, the Times of India reported Thursday.

An Indian tax authority ruled Wednesday that Microsoft’s India subsidiary Gracemac Corporation should have paid tax on the $560 million it showed as revenue for the six financial years up to March 31, 2004, the report said. The dispute revolves around whether the amount qualifies as royalties or sales. The amount should have been taxed as royalties, the Commissioner of Income Tax ruled in New Delhi, citing language in the end-user license agreement shipped with the company’s software. India taxes royalties at 15 percent, but the tax appeals body appeared to be levying a similar amount in penalties and interest charges.

Microsoft’s India subsidiary did not pay taxes on the income, citing a double tax-avoidance treaty between India and the United States and noting that an overseas subsidiary paid tax in the US on profits from the software sales. “Microsoft believes it is in full compliance with Indian tax laws and the income tax treaty agreement between India and the US,” a Microsoft statement said. “Microsoft is reviewing the order and will determine its course of action accordingly.” The technology giant is expected to appeal the decision.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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India Plans to Spend $300 Billion on Oil Exploration

By Archana Chaudhary

April 5 (Bloomberg) -- India will spend $300 billion over the next five to seven years on oil exploration and production, said M.S. Srinivasan, the Oil Ministry's senior official.

``The exploration and production business will become a $5.2 trillion industry in the next five to seven years,'' Srinivasan told reporters today in Mumbai.

India, Asia's third-biggest oil consumer, is competing with countries such as Nigeria to attract exploration by global producers as domestic output falls. The South Asian nation, the world's fastest-growing major economy after China, depends on imports for 70 percent of its oil needs.

India plans to invest $450 million in oil exploration and production in Venezuela, the biggest crude oil exporting nation in the Americas, and will sign an agreement with state-run Petroleos de Venezuela SA next week, Oil Minister Murli Deora said today in Mumbai.

ONGC Videsh Ltd., the overseas exploration unit of Oil & Natural Gas Corp., India's largest producer, is planning a venture with Petroleos de Venezuela to operate the San Cristobal area. These fields may hold reserves of as much as 250 million metric tons.

India must also compete with China, among others, to buy oil assets abroad as energy demand increases.

China, the world's second-biggest energy consumer, boosted its spending on crude oil and natural gas exploration by 9.6 percent between January and November 2007 to meet rising demand.

Only the U.S. uses more energy than China.

Bloomberg.com: Asia
 
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India's forex reserves swell by $4.5 bn

MUMBAI: India's foreign exchange reserves increased by a whopping USD 4.504 billion to stand at USD 309.16 billion for the week ended March 28.

The forex reserves had dipped by USD 1.8 billion a week before to stand at USD 304.65 billion.

Foreign currency assets increased by USD 4.498 billion to USD 299.147 billion, against USD 294.649 billion in a week-ago period, the data release by the Reserve Bank here said.

The Foreign currency assets expressed in US Dollar terms include the effect of appreciation or depreciation of non-US currencies such as Euro, Sterling and Yen held in reserve, the RBI said.

India's reserve position in the International Monetary Fund increased by USD 5 million to stand at USD 437 million.

During the period, gold reserves remained static at USD 9.558 billion while the Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) increased by a million to USD 19 million, the RBI said.

India's forex reserves swell by $4.5 bn- Forex-Markets-The Economic Times
 
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FDI inflows cross $20 billion in April-February 2007-08

New Delhi, Apr 4 Foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows in February 2008 jumped by a whopping 712% over the same month last year to $5.67 billion, surpassing such inflows received in any single year since 1991 barring 2006-07. The country also received foreign direct investment worth $20.13 billion in April-February 2007-08, an increase of 70% from $11.88 billion in the same period a year ago. "The $20.13 billion inflow is the highest FDI into equity in the country during any year", an official statement said.

"Over the last 3-4 years, India has been attracting higher FDI, which is positive for investment and growth scenario," DK Joshi, director and principal economist at credit rating agency Crisil, said. From August 1991 to December 2007, the total FDI received by the country was worth $67.32 billion. Mauritius has been the top source of FDI with it accounting for around 45% of the total FDI inflows and $20.1 billion worth FDI coming into India from that country from April 2000-December 2007 period. USA is next with $4 billion (9.12% of the total) during the same period and UK $3.4 billion (7.8% of the total). The services sector (both financial and non-financial) received the maximum FDI worth $8.9 billion (19.84% of the total) during April 2000-December 2007 period, followed by computer software and hardware sector with $7 billion (15.65% of the total) during the same period.

In February 2008, China received $6.928 billion worth FDI, an increase of 38.31% over the same month last year. In January and February 2008, FDI flows were worth $18.12 billion.

The actual FDI inflows into China on a year-on-year in January was $112 billion, an increase of 109.78%. In 2006-07, China got $63 billion worth FDI.

http://www.financialexpress.com/news/FDI-inflows-cross--20-billion-in-April-February-2007-08/292596/
 
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Indian chip policy nets $16 billion in manufacturing proposals

BENGALURU, India — Electronics and semiconductor manufacturers here are looking to work with the Indian government to pull together proposals for establishing a chip fab, an LCD plant and solar manufacturing facilities.

The Indian government has so far received seven investment proposals worth over $16 billion. The proposals come in response to an incentive package for semiconductor and electronics manufacturing announced last year. Thursday's (April 3) announcement makes it clear that the biggest IC manufacturing plan announced so far, SemIndia, has yet to submit a proposal.

Proposals received so far cover the manufacture of polysilicon, single- and multi-crystalline ingots, wafers, solar cells, photovoltaic modules, LCDs, systems-on-chip and IC assembly, testing and packaging.

Reliance Industries, one of India's largest industrial groups, has proposed two facilities. One is for wafer fabrication, testing and packaging. Investment would total $4.6 billion over 10 years. The plant would employ 4,000 workers. Reliance is seeking state subsidies totaling more than over $800 million.

The second is for a $2.9 billion plant in western India to manufacture polysilicon, ingots, wafers and photovoltaic modules. The plant would employ 11,000 workers, according to the federal ministry of communications and information technology. Reliance is seeking state subsidies totaling about $600 million.

Meanwhile, Videocon Industries Ltd. has proposed a $2 billion LCD/TFT manufacturing plant in western India with annual capacity of up to 9 million panels. Videocon wants $500 million in subsidies to set up the LCD plant.

MoserBaer PV Technologies India plans to make silicon cells, modules and thin-film concentrators with an investment totaling $1.5 billion near Chennai in southern India. It is seeking subsidies totaling about $600 million.

Titan Energy Systems and KSK Energy Ventures also submitted proposals to manufacture solar energy components.

Signet Solar, founded by EDA veteran Prabhu Goel, said it plans to invest nearly $2.5 billion to make photovoltaics and related products with an annual capacity of 1 gigawatt. Signet has requested subsidies of about $500 million.

Under its special incentive package scheme, the Indian government would provide 20 percent of capital expenditures during the first 10 years for technology projects located in special economic zones. It would provide 25 percent of capital expenditures for projects outside of these zones. Incentives include financial subsidies and equity participation.

EETimes.com - Indian chip policy nets $16 billion in manufacturing proposals
 
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Vedanta Resources plans to invest $15 billion in Indian mining sector

JAIPUR: London-based Vedanta Resources is planning to invest $15 billion in the mining sector in India and Africa by 2010.

Vedanta Resources executive chairman Anil Agrawal told ET that the company is planning to become the largest producer of metals in the world. “We are targeting at achieving the 1 million tonnes per annum production capacity in copper and zinc while in Aluminium, where we have already touched the magical 1 million figure, we are trying to scale it up to 3 million tonnes per annum,” he said.

The mining major is also focussing on ramping up the silver production to 500 tonnes per annum to become the largest producer of silver in Asia. “We are investing Rs 500 crore for enhancing the silver production from 200 tonnes per annum to 500 tonnes per annum at our Udaipur-based facility in Hindustan Zinc. We would not only restrict ourselves to upstream activities but also explore markets for local consumption,” Mr Agrawal said.

Vedanta Resources is active in copper, aluminium, iron ore and zinc. Now, it wants to foray into gold mining also. “We want to acquire gold mines like Bharat Gold mine or Hatti Gold mine to expand our canvas. In fact, we are interested in public sector companies which are on block—even if it’s Nalco, Hindustan Copper Limited or IFCI. We have proved that we can transform sick PSUs into profit making companies,” Mr Agrawal said.

The group’s optic fibre cable manufacturing subsidiary, Sterlite Technologies, is also planning to invest Rs 500 crore to ramp up the optic fibre production capacity to 12 million km from existing 4 million km. “The expansion would take place at the company’s subsisting plants in Aurangabad and the commercial production is expected by June 2009,” Mr Agrawal said. The company enjoys 45% optic fibres share in the domestic market, and 4% share internationally.

Vedanta Resources plans to invest $15 billion in Indian mining sector- Metals & Mining-Ind'l Goods / Svs-News By Industry-News-The Economic Times
 
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‘Shining India’ is losing its lustre

NEW DELHI: Booming India is reeling from a flurry of bad financial headlines, suggesting the outlook for the world’s second fastest-growing major economy is not as rosy as it was, analysts say.

Economic growth is losing pace and inflation is on the rise, meaning India’s central bank which has hiked interest rates nine times since 2004 to tame prices has little room to loosen monetary policy to spur activity, they say.

“The picture of very strong growth and low inflation in India is starting to give way to one of slowing growth and rising inflation,” said Robert Prior-Wandesforde, an economist at HSBC in Singapore.

Last Friday, inflation in Asia’s third-largest economy hit a nearly 10-month high of 5.02 per cent, pushing through the central bank’s ceiling of five percent for this fiscal year.

Adding to the gloom has been a 25 per cent slide since Jan 10 in India’s benchmark Sensex share index whose 47 per cent jump last year made it one of the world’s top performers as foreign investors have bailed out.

“With the (global) economic turbulence, you’re seeing a lot of risk aversion,” said Amitabh Chakraborty, equities president of Mumbai’s Religare Securities.

Also, the Congress-led government, which faces general elections in little over a year, is storing up fiscal trouble with its $15-billion loan bailout for farmers, big civil service pay hikes and tax cuts announced late last month in its populist, poll-geared budget, economists say.

“We think the fiscal deficit will increase due to the spending pressures,” said Goldman Sachs economist Tushar Poddar.

Economic growth is forecast by the government to slow to 8.8 per cent in this fiscal year to March 31, 2008 from 9.6 per cent last year the first deceleration in three years.

Some economists project growth could fall to as low as seven percent next year due to the US-led global slowdown, aggressive monetary tightening and a sharp rise in the rupee’s value against the dollar, which has hit exports.

Seven per cent growth would still be enviable by anaemic Western levels but is too low for India, where analysts say double-digit expansion is needed to help hundreds of millions escape a grim poverty trap. The stock market’s slide has also cast a cloud over plans by firms to raise a projected $15 billion in IPOs this year nearly double the record 8.3 billion raised in 2007.

Already, two high-profile firms have pulled their IPOs, including Emaar MGF a joint venture of Dubai’s Emaar, the world’s biggest property developer which abandoned its bid to raise $1.6 billion, citing “indications of a US recession and global meltdown”.

The IPOs are key to expansion as much of the funds raised would be invested in plant and machinery, and improvements in India’s dilapidated infrastructure such as its potholed roads, shabby ports and unreliable power.

Economists as major growth constraints routinely cite lengthy blackouts even in big metropolitan centres such as New Delhi.

While India’s economy is better insulated than many other Asian nations from the global slowdown because it is not so heavily dependent on exports, it is not immune to the chill financial headwinds, analysts say.

A lot of economic growth has been driven by risk capital, especially from the United States, which is slowing as foreign investors repatriate funds amid fears of a US recession, said Religare’s Chakraborty.

For the time being, the government and central bank are making checking inflation their priority.

The central bank and the government are “signalling the risk to inflation is a bigger worry than the risk to growth”, said JP Morgan analyst Rajeev Malik.

Soaring world commodity and crude oil prices have alarmed the central bank while the government sees cutting inflation as crucial to its political fate, analysts say. Inflation has been blamed as a key factor in several state poll drubbings for Congress, which owes its 2004 general election win to support from India’s poor masses hardest hit by price rises.Prime Minister Manmohan Singh last month called inflation “the cruellest tax” as it hits the poor the hardest. afp

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India's exports may touch $500 bln by 2013 - CII

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's exports can touch $500 billion in five years with more incentives to textiles, gems and jewellery, leather and engineering firms, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) said on Tuesday.

"In these four sectors, India needs to be among the top three exporters in the globe, which accounts for more than 50 percent of India's current export basket," said a CII report, ahead of the trade policy due on Friday.

CII said the export strategy should also focus on fast growing markets -- Latin America and the Carribbean and Africa.

Currently, India's exports account for just 3.5 percent of Africa's total import demand and just 0.7 percent of import demand of Latin America and Carribbean countries.

"These shares can easily be doubled with minimum efforts in the next two to three years," CII said.

CII said it expects India's exports to reach $500 billion by 2013, if the past growth trend continues. India's exports for the fiscal year 2007-08 are expected to be between $155 billion and $160 billion.

On Sunday, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry said the trade policy for 2008/09 should extend export incentive schemes until 2010 and announce steps to cut transaction costs and ease procedures.

India's exports may touch $500 bln by 2013 - CII | Business News | Reuters
 
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Indian telcos may invest $4 billion in submarine cables

Major telecoms companies in India, Bharti Airtel, Reliance Communications, Tata Communications and BSNL are planning to invest $4 billion in undersea cables, The Economic Times has reported.

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Building of multiple cable systems will enable the telcos to offer high bandwidth triple-play services including IPTV and HDTV. Users will be able to enjoy better broadband speeds.

Bharti Airtel has partnered with five international companies, including Google, to construct the 'Unity' submarine cable system linking the US and Japan. It is also part of two other plans - the 20,000 km-long Asia-America Gateway project and the I-Me-We system - to connect India to France via the Middle East.

Tata Communications is part of both the 6,500-km Intra Asia undersea cable consortium that will cover Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, Philippines and Vietnam and TGN Eurasia cable system, which will link Mumbai directly to Paris, London and Madrid via Egypt. Both the investments form part of Tata Communication's plan to spend $2 billion on additional submarine cable systems to connect Asia, Middle East and Africa to Europe over the next five to eight years.

Reliance Communications is building the undersea links on it own. The FLAG NGN project will invest $1.5-billion in undersea cable to cover 50,000 km across 60 countries. Millenium Telecom, a joint venture between BSNL and MTNL will soon award contracts for both the West Asia and Singapore undersea links.

Indian telcos may invest $4 billion in submarine cables - Computer Business Review
 
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India puts South Asia on growth path: World Bank

WASHINGTON: With India expected to contribute much to new global energy demand in the next two decades and rising savings, South Asia is on the path toward sustainable economic growth, according to a new World Bank-IMF report.

But most countries around the world will fall short on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of eight globally agreed development goals with a due date of 2015, warns the report released Tuesday ahead of the World Bank- International Monetary Fund meetings this weekend.

Though much of the world is set to cut extreme poverty to half by then, prospects are gravest for the goals of reducing child and maternal mortality, with serious shortfalls also likely in primary school completion, nutrition, and sanitation goals, it said.

"In this Year of Action on the MDGs, I am particularly concerned about the risks of failing to meet the goal of reducing hunger and malnutrition, the 'forgotten MDG'," said Robert B Zoellick, president of the World Bank Group.



Noting that South Asia has positive adjusted net saving, a necessary condition for sustainable economic growth, the report said the region is likely to halve by 2015 the number of people without access to safe drinking water, but will not achieve the same target for improved basic sanitation.

'The Global Monitoring Report: MDGs and the Environment - Agenda for Inclusive and Sustainable Development' stresses the link between environment and development and calls for urgent action on climate change.

"This year's high level meetings in connection with the MDG halfway point provide an opportunity to agree on priorities for action and milestones for monitoring progress," said Zia Qureshi, lead author of the report.

While South Asia accounted for less than six percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions in 2000, India today is third among the top 10 emitters of industrial water pollution, with emissions of over 1.5 million kg per day, Outdoor air pollution places both adults and children at risk in South Asia. This is an acute problem in urban areas of fast-growing economies like India.

Earlier snowmelt and the loss of glacial buffering in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas will affect the seasonality of water supply for large segments of India's population, the report said.

The report warns that developing countries stand to suffer the most from climate change and the degradation of natural resources. To build on hard-won gains, developing countries need support to address the links between growth, development and environmental sustainability.

"Developing countries need more foreign aid and domestic resources to reach the MDGs. High economic growth and a stable macroeconomic environment remain essential for reducing poverty and increasing investment in health and education," said Dominique Strauss-Kahn, IMF managing director.

Though the overall aid landscape is expanding, official development assistance (ODA) - estimated at $103.7 billion in 2007 - has stalled, the report said.

To meet the G8 promises to increase aid by $50 billion by 2010, ODA must expand, it said noting that new donors like China and India are growing in size and importance.

With stronger efforts by the countries themselves and their development partners, most MDGs remain achievable for most countries, the report says. With this in mind, the report lays out an integrated six-point agenda, with strong, inclusive growth at the top.

The agenda also calls for more effective aid, a successful outcome to the Doha round of trade talks, more emphasis on strengthening programmes in health, education and nutrition, and financing and technology transfers to support climate change mitigation and adaptation.


India puts South Asia on growth path: World Bank- Indicators-Economy-News-The Economic Times
 
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