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India’s trade deficit at $4.66bn

NEW DELHI: India’s trade deficit fell to $4.66 billion in February from $5.78 billion a month earlier, data showed on Monday, as lower global oil prices led to a drop in import costs. Robust growth in Asia’s fourth-largest economy had seen the deficit grow over the past few months. It stood at $5.68 billion in December 2006 and $6.20 billion in November. “The deficit has come down in February probably because of lower oil prices. The deficit would be below $60 billion for the entire year,” said Saumitra Chaudhuri, economist with domestic ratings agency ICRA. India imports more than 70 per cent of the oil it needs, and robust industrial growth has raised demand for fuel.

The deficit stood at $2.49 billion in February 2006. Global oil prices fell to around $58 a barrel in February on expectations of warmer weather in the United States. The trade deficit stood at $55.86 billion during the first 11 months of the fiscal year to March 2007, compared with $37.62 billion during the same period last year.

Exports rose 7.87 per cent in February from a year earlier to $9.7 billion, while imports were up 25.11 per cent to $14.36 billion compared with the same year-ago period. Oil imports accounted for $4.06 billion.

During April-February, exports grew by 19 per cent to $109.13 billion, while imports were up by 28 per cent at $164.99 billion. India is aiming for export growth of 22.3 per cent to $126 billion for the full year.

The News.
http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=49402
 
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Tata Steel completes acquisition of Corus

NEW DELHI: India’s Tata Steel has completed its $11.3 billion (euro 8.5 billion) acquisition of European steel maker Corus Group PLC, a takeover that makes the Indian company the world’s fifth-largest steel producer.

The company has retained the top management of Corus, who will work with Tata officials to integrate operations of the two companies, Tata Steel said in a statement late on Monday.

Tata Steel was the winner of a January auction for Corus that was overseen by Britain’s takeover regulator. The Indian company’s 608 pence ($11.74; euro8.96) per share bid edged out a final bid of 603 pence ($11.64; euro8.89) per share from Brazilian steelmaker Companhia Siderurgica Nacional, or CSN.

It was biggest ever acquisition by an Indian company. Last month, Corus shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favour of the deal.

Tata Steel is part of the Tata Group, a sprawling conglomerate with interests spanning almost everything from salt to software.

The Tata-Corus combine will have the capacity to produce 27 million tons of steel in 2007 and employ 84,000 employees across 45 countries, the statement said.

"Together we are a well balanced company, strategically well placed to compete at the leading edge of a rapidly changing global steel industry," the statement quoted Group Chairman Ratan Tata as saying.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=49514
 
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April 05, 2007
Indian rupee near 8-year high against $

NEW DELHI, April 4: The Indian rupee surged to a near eight-year high against the dollar on Wednesday as commercial banks sold the US currency to generate cash to meet new higher deposit requirements.

The Indian currency broke through the 43-rupee mark to end the day at 42.90 rupees against the dollar, firming from 43.10 rupees the previous day.

Earlier it hit an intraday peak of 42.84 rupees to the dollar, its highest level since June 1999.

The latest rise follows a move by India's central bank to tighten monetary policy again last Friday in a bid to combat inflation in Asia's fourth largest economy which is growing by around nine per cent.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which has been in a tightening policy mode since late 2004, lifted its main short-term lending rate by 25 basis points to 7.75 per cent.

http://www.dawn.com/2007/04/05/ebr8.htm
 
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Thursday, 5 April 2007

India to see new economic zones

India's government has lifted a freeze on the acquisition of land to set up Special Economic Zones (SEZ).
A temporary ban was imposed in January after widespread protests by farmers who sad they were not being properly compensated for lost farmland.

Commerce Minister Kamal Nath, announcing the new plan, said land would no longer be acquired by state governments, but by developers.

The idea of tax-free zones stems from China, as a way to promote trade.

There will now be a limit of 5,000 hectares for each zone.

The initiative has inspired huge interest among would-be developers but has also prompted resistance from rural communities.

Recent government moves to clear land for a petrochemical centre in West Bengal led to conflicts killing 14. Other regions also saw protests.

Farming in India is the mainstay of some two thirds of the population.

On the other hand, increasing trade is deemed a way to encourage industrialisation and increase India's economic base.

Venugopal Dhoot, president of the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said allowing more such economic areas "would accelerate economic activities for increased production and exports".

The government said permission would be given for 83 SEZs. A further 162 such areas which already have preliminary permission would be looked into.

Another potential 140 new zones would also be examined.

Following the recent protests in the West Bengal's village of Nandigram and elsewhere, Commerce Minister Kamal Nath said no state could oblige farmers to sell their land.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6531189.stm
 
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India mills to muscle into white sugar market

NEW DELHI/LONDON: Indian sugar mills, bolstered by transport subsidies, will seize market share from Thai and Brazilian exporters in global refined sugar trade.

Indian refined (white) sugar sales will do best in regional markets, including Pakistan and Bangladesh, because soaring freight costs will make it harder for producers located further away to compete, analysts and dealers said on Thursday.

India removed a ban on sugar exports in January after forecasts of a big crop in the 2006/07 season. Indian authorities have since announced plans to subsidise exports, and analysts estimate the subsidies might be worth $30-35 per tonne.

But exporters face tough times as sugar prices have fallen in the face of a big global supply surplus.

“There is no big market for Indian sugar now. There will be a bloodbath all around here,” said GSC Rao, executive director of Simbhaoli Sugar.

An analyst with a Western trade house said India would win market share in areas such as south Asian and east Africa against sugars from Brazil and Thailand. Brazil might fare better in Mediterranean countries, while Thailand, Asia’s biggest exporter, will compete strongly against India for sales to the key Indonesian market.

Thailand should also enjoy a freight advantage over Brazilin the Iraqi market, a destination for high-quality sugar.

“The battle has already been decided by the freight rate,” the trade house analyst said.

However, a senior Indian sugar industry official, who did not want to be identified, said: “There definitely will be a problem with Brazil. Even with the freight advantage, their sugar will be cheaper than ours to neighbouring countries.”

Ocean freight rates for dry commodities have surged on Chinese demand for raw materials and massive congestion at Australian ports.

At the end of March, Indian authorities announced plans to create a two million tonne sugar buffer, and also to give transport and freight incentives to mills to help sugar exports with the country heading for a bumper output.

According to the industry, India is set to produce more than25 million tonnes of sugar in the current 2006/07 season that ends in September, up 30 per cent from the previous year and higher than earlier estimates.

The government decision is believed to be awaiting clearance from the election commission due to elections in sugar-growing states like Uttar Pradesh.

Some analysts expressed doubts that the world market would have the capacity to absorb up to three million tonnes of Indian sugar exports projected by Indian industry officials for 2006/07.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=49776
 
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India’s oilmeal exports up

NEW DELHI: India’s annual oilmeal exports rose 17 per cent in the year to March 31, 2007, to 5.16 million tonnes, trade officials said on Thursday. The Solvent Extractors’ Association of India said soymeal exports during the period increased to 3.6 million tonnes from 3.4 million tonnes in 2005/06. Rapeseed meal exports during the period nearly doubled to 970,725 tonnes from 533,275 tonnes. The trade body said exports of oilmeal were a record in both quantity and value terms, generating revenues of Rs43 billion ($1 billion). The biggest buyer of India’s oilmeal was Vietnam, which increased imports 41 per cent to 1.25 million over the year before, followed by South Korea at 1.15 million tonnes and Indonesia at 727,225 tonnes.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=49792
 
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India inflation eases

NEW DELHI: India’s inflation rate eased slightly to 6.39 per cent, according to official data on Thursday, but remained far above the central bank’s tolerance level. The rate fell to 6.39 per cent for the week ended March 24 on the back of a fall in some food prices from 6.46 per cent where it had been stuck for the previous three weeks, figures showed. The rate stood at 4.06 per cent a year earlier. The central bank has been tightening monetary policy steadily since late 2004 to try to tame inflation in Asia’s fourth-largest economy which has been growing by around nine per cent. The central bank said in its policy announcement that it was “critical to take demonstrable and determined action on an immediate basis.”

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=49793
 
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India attracts universities from the US

Somini Sengupta writes how India is fast becoming the hot bed for American universities

IT was an unusual university entrance interview. Late one recent evening here in steamy southern India, Vijay Muddana sat in a mercilessly air-conditioned room, leaning forward in his chair and talking to the wall. There, projected on a screen via videoconferencing equipment, were administrators from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, where an early morning snowstorm had caused a power failure, delaying the interviews by an hour. The Indians found it funny that even in Pittsburgh, there were power failures.

Mr Muddana, 21, was among a dozen ambitious young Indians hoping to get a graduate degree in information technology offered jointly by Carnegie Mellon and a small private college here.

The exchange was one of the many ways in which American universities, eager to expand to markets abroad, are training their sights on India. Some 40 per cent of the population is under 18, and a scarcity of higher education opportunities is frequently cited as a potential hurdle to economic progress.

The American universities are just testing the waters, because the law here is still vague on how foreign educational institutions can operate. But that may soon change.

The Bush administration’s envoy for public diplomacy, Karen P. Hughes, is visiting India with a half-dozen American university presidents to promote Brand America in Indian education. The United States wants an easing of rules under a draft law on foreign investment in Indian education, which is to be introduced in Parliament in April.

If the law is approved, foreign institutions would be exempt from strict rules that currently apply to all government-accredited universities in India on fees, staff salaries and curriculums. The government has already proposed setting up an expert committee to review the standards and reputation of foreign universities that want to establish independent campuses here.

The growing American interest in Indian education reflects a confluence of trends. It comes as American universities are trying to expand their global reach in general, and discovering India’s economic rise in particular. It also reflects the need for India to close its gaping demand for higher education.

Among Indians ages 18 to 24, only seven per cent enter a university, according to the National Knowledge Commission, which advises the prime minister’s office on higher education. To roughly double that percentage — effectively bringing it up to par with the rest of Asia — the commission recommends the creation of 1,500 colleges and universities over the next several years. India’s public universities are often woefully underfinanced and strike-prone.

Indians are already voting with their feet: the commission estimates that 160,000 Indians are studying abroad, spending an estimated $4 billion a year. Indians and Chinese make up the largest number of foreign students in the United States.

Madeleine Green, vice president for international initiatives at the American Council on Education, calls India “the next frontier” for American institutions, many of which have already set up base in China.

“The pull factor is the interest of India and the opportunity that India now presents,” she said. “The push is from American institutions saying, ‘There’s a world out there and we need to discover it. It’ll make our grads more competitive.’ It’s part of their push to internationalise.”

At the moment, however, instead of setting up satellite campuses as was done in China, Singapore or Qatar, most American institutions are opting to join hands with existing Indian institutions.

Columbia Business School, for instance, started a student exchange programme earlier this year with the Indian Institute of Management at Ahmedabad. The institutions teamed up to write case materials devised to teach American students about doing business in India.

“For us it’s market access; for them it’s access to a bigger business school,” said R. Glenn Hubbard, dean of Columbia Business School.

Columbia is the latest of several foreign business schools to tie up with the Ahmedabad campus, reflecting what its director, Bakul Dholakia, sees as a growing appetite to train future executives about India. “Companies out there need managers now who have a unique Asian perspective,” he said.

The Americanisation of Indian education is following a variety of approaches. Champlain College, based in Burlington, Vt, runs a satellite campus in Mumbai that offers degrees in one of three career-oriented subjects that college administrators have found to be attractive to Indians: business, hospitality industry management and software engineering. A 2005 study commissioned by the government found at least 131 foreign educational institutions operating in India at the time, a vast majority offering vocational courses. However, Champlain’s degrees are not recognised by the Indian government, something that is still typical here. One government official who looks after private education estimated that at least 100,000 students graduated from entirely unaccredited private institutions. The study found that students did not consider unaccredited college degrees to be a hindrance to getting jobs in the private sector.

California State University, Long Beach, has agreed to help start American-style, four-year degree programmes at state-run Lucknow University in northern India. Its vice chancellor, R.P. Singh, said the California institution would help draft the curriculum and train faculty.

Cornell University, whose president is among the American university officials visiting India in recent months, is seeking to expand research collaborations, particularly in agriculture and public health.

Rice University envisions faculty and student exchanges, particularly in technology. “What’s in it for us is opportunities for our students, opportunities for our faculty in terms of research collaboration,” said David Leebron, the university president, who was in India in February. “At this stage we think we are best served by developing partnerships with Indian institutions.”

For its part, Carnegie Mellon offers its degree in partnership with a small private institution here, the Shri Shiv Shankar Nadar College of Engineering. Most of the course work is done at relatively inexpensive rates here in India, followed by six months in Pittsburgh, at the end of which students graduate with a Carnegie Mellon degree.

The arrangement circumvents most of the usual Indian government restrictions. The curriculum is devised in partnership with Carnegie Mellon, and students are chosen jointly by faculty from both schools.

There are no affirmative action requirements for student admissions, as there are in accredited colleges. Fees are not regulated by the state. It is expensive by Indian standards, though nearly all of the students are subsidized by scholarships financed by Shiv Nadar, the college’s founder and chief executive of HCL Technologies, one of India’s leading technology companies.

The applicants on the recent evening in Chennai were eager to please the gatekeepers from Pittsburgh. They addressed them politely with a series of “yes, sirs.” Asked what they could contribute to Carnegie Mellon, some of them became flummoxed. One young man said he wanted to develop software designed for the “global citizen,” by which he meant a way to transfer money across continents using a mobile phone.

Mr Muddana, who had a bachelor’s degree in information technology and had spent the past eight months as a software developer for an Indian firm, said he saw the programme as a cost-effective ticket to an American degree and a chance to work for a few years in the United States.

His father, he said, failed to grasp his ambitions. Why would he quit a secure, well-paying job to go back to school, his father wanted to know. Mr Muddana said his father taught at a government school in a rural district in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh State. He earns today roughly what his son makes fresh out of college. Mr Muddana said his father was bewildered by his dreams and by how much it would cost to get a master’s degree.

“He’s presently thinking only of the investment,” Mr Muddana said, “not the

outcome.” — Dawn/The New York Times

http://www.dawn.com/weekly/education/education3.htm
 
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April 05, 2007
Indian rupee near 8-year high against $

NEW DELHI, April 4: The Indian rupee surged to a near eight-year high against the dollar on Wednesday as commercial banks sold the US currency to generate cash to meet new higher deposit requirements.

The Indian currency broke through the 43-rupee mark to end the day at 42.90 rupees against the dollar, firming from 43.10 rupees the previous day.

Earlier it hit an intraday peak of 42.84 rupees to the dollar, its highest level since June 1999.

The latest rise follows a move by India's central bank to tighten monetary policy again last Friday in a bid to combat inflation in Asia's fourth largest economy which is growing by around nine per cent.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which has been in a tightening policy mode since late 2004, lifted its main short-term lending rate by 25 basis points to 7.75 per cent.

http://www.dawn.com/2007/04/05/ebr8.htm

Wow! Big and good news!
Helps in domestic market, is bad for exporters.
 
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India top offshoring destination: Report
6 Apr, 2007

MUMBAI: An unbeatable mix of low costs, deep technical and language skills, mature vendors and supportive government policies have taken India to the top among global destinations for offshoring services. And this is despite all the concern about overheating, wage inflation and service levels, a recent survey by AT Kearney said.

In overall ranking, dominated by the developing countries from Asia, India is followed by China, Malaysia, Thailand and Brazil, the survey, christened Global Services Location Index 2007 said.

To arrive at final ranking, AT Kearney surveyed over 50 countries for different aspects related to offshoring, like people skills, financial attractiveness and business environment. India maintains a wide, albeit slightly shrinking, lead over China, confirming what industry surveys and visiting executives have found, the survey said.

While compensation costs in India have risen because of the recent high economic growth, "these cost escalations have been matched by corresponding increases in skill supply and quality indicators," the global consultancy major said.

India's success is also prompting developing countries to replicate its model. While in Asia, two of its neighbours, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, have begun to recognise the potential of the export services sector, a host of Latin American countries too are taking the same route, the survey pointed out.

Sri Lanka and Pakistan, which entered AT Kearney's latest index for the first time, offer many of the same advantages as India, with similar labour costs, widespread use of English, strong education systems and increasingly open and well-regulated business environments.

However, both countries have only recently woken up to the enormous opportunity of the offshore services sector and therefore lack India's breadth and depth of experience. These two countries are also disadvantaged by their relatively smaller population-base and obvious concerns over internal security, the survey said.

Although India ranks high overall, because of its skilled and technically superior pool of manpower, it suffers on the two other parameters - financial attractiveness and business environment rankings.

In terms of people skills India ranks second, behind US (tier II cities) but ahead of China and Germany. As per business environment rankings, India is placed at 34th, while Singapore comes top, followed by Germany and UK. The survey said when it comes to cost effectiveness, Vietnam, with one of the lowest telecom costs in world, comes on top.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...destination_Report/rssarticleshow/1862738.cms
 
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Friday, April 06, 2007

Krishnapatnam port to invest $1.6b by 2011

SINGAPORE: Krishnapatnam Port Co, a family-owned start-up on India’s east coast, will invest $1.6 billion in a new container and bulk port to profit from the growing trade between Asia’s economic giants China and India.

The port, close to the sea trade lanes linking Asia to the Persian Gulf and Europe, is due to open for container ships in June 2008 and will be completed by 2011.

It will have an initial annual capacity of 1 million twenty-foot containers, Mahesh Goel, the head of Krishnapatnam Port Company’s container business, told Reuters in an interview.

Singapore, the world’s busiest port, moved nearly 24 million boxes at its terminals last year, while India’s biggest port, Mumbai, handles around 2 million twenty-foot containers a year.

“We are also looking into opening two more ports on India’s east coast and one on the west coast,” he said but declined to give details because the projects are still at an early stage.

Krishnapatnam Port Co is owned by Hyderabad-based businessman CV Rao and his sons. The family also owns the Navayuga Group, a holding company with interests in marine construction and information technology.

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\04\06\story_6-4-2007_pg5_20
 
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India's successful high-tech world needs more workers

By Tim Sullivan, Associated Press

MYSORE, India — At the heart of the sprawling corporate campus, in a hilltop building overlooking the immaculately shorn lawns, the sports fields and the hypermodern theater complex, young engineers crowd into a classroom.
They are India's best and brightest, with stellar grades that launched them into a high-tech industry growing at more than 25% annually.

And their topic of the day? Basic telephone skills.

"Hello?" one young man says nervously, holding his hand to his ear like a phone. "Hello? I'd like to leave a message for Number 17. Can I do that?"

Nearly two decades into India's phenomenal growth as an international center for high technology, the industry has a problem: It's running out of workers.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: India | Tata Consultancy Services | NASSCOM
There may be a lot of potential — Indian schools churn out 400,000 new engineers, the core of the high-tech industry, every year — but as few as 100,000 are actually ready to join the job world, experts say.

Instead, graduates are leaving universities that are mired in theory classes, and sometimes so poorly funded they don't have computer labs. Even students from the best colleges can be dulled by cram schools and left without the most basic communication skills, according to industry leaders.

So the country's voracious high-tech companies, desperate for ever-increasing numbers of staffers to fill their ranks, have to go hunting.

"The problem is not a shortage of people," said Mohandas Pai, human resources chief for Infosys Technologies, the software giant that built and runs the Mysore campus for its new employees. "It's a shortage of trained people."

From the outside, this nation of 1.03 billion, with its immense English-speaking population, may appear to have a bottomless supply of cheap workers with enough education to claim more outsourced Western jobs.

But things look far different in India, where technology companies are spending hundreds of millions of dollars in a frantic attempt to ensure their profit-making machine keeps producing.

"This is really the Achilles heel of the industry," said James Friedman, an analyst with Susquehanna Financial Group, an investment firm based in Bala Cynwyd, Pa., who has studied the issue.

"When we first started covering the industry, in 2000, there were maybe 50,000 jobs and 500,000 applicants," he said. Now there are perhaps 180,000 annual openings, but only between 100,000 and 200,000 qualified candidates.

For now, industry is keeping up, but only barely. A powerful trade group, the National Association of Software Services Companies, or NASSCOM, estimates a potential shortfall of 500,000 technology professionals by 2010.

On the most basic level, it's a problem of success. The high-tech industry is expanding so fast that the population can't keep up with the demand for high-end workers.

Tata Consultancy Services, for instance, India's largest software company, hires around 3,000 people a month. The consulting firm Accenture plans to hire 8,000 in the next six months and IBM says it will bring on more than 50,000 additional people in India by 2010.

A shortage means something feared here: higher wages.

Much of India's success rests on the fact that its legions of software programmers work for far less than those in the West — often for one-fourth the salary. If industry can't find enough workers to keep wages low, the companies that look to India for things like software development will turn to competitors, from Poland to the Philippines, and the entire industry could stumble.

The responses range from private "finishing schools" polishing the computer skills of new graduates to multimillion-dollar partnerships spanning business, government and higher education. The biggest companies have built elaborate training centers. The Mysore campus, for instance, was little more than scrub-filled fields when Infosys, India's second-largest software firm, based in the nearby technology hub of Bangalore, began building here in earnest three years ago.

In America, the campus would be nothing unusual. But in India — with its electricity outages, poverty and mountains of garbage — the walled-in corporate fantasyland, watched over by armed guards, is anything but normal.

It has 120 faculty members, more than 80 buildings, 2,350 hostel rooms and a 500,000-square-foot education complex. There's a movie complex built inside a geodesic dome. An army of workers sweeps the already-spotless streets and trims the already-perfect lawns.

Month by month, it's getting bigger. Today, some 4,500 students at a time attend the 16-week course for new employees. By September, there will be space for 13,000.

Infosys spent $350 million on the campus, and will spend $140 million this year on training, said Pai, the human resources chief.

"This is the enormous cost we have to pay to ensure we have enough people," he said.

They're not the only ones.

IBM's technical skills programs reached well over 100,000 Indians last year, from children to university professors. At Tata Consultancy Services, measures range from a talent search as far afield as Uruguay to having executives teach university classes — all designed simply to make people employable.

Most industry leaders believe these investments will pay off, and India will remain competitive. But most are also guarded in their optimism.

"We should be able to get through this year, but if we don't get things like finishing schools into place we'll see an actual shortage," said Kiran Karnik, the NASSCOM chairman.

Much of the problem is rooted in a deeply flawed school system.

As India's economy blossomed over 15 years, spawning a middle class desperate to push their children further up the economic ladder, the higher education system grew dramatically. The number of engineering colleges, for instance, has nearly tripled.

But the problems have simply grown worse.

India has technical institutes that seldom have electricity, and colleges with no computers. There are universities where professors seldom show up. Textbooks can be decades old.

Even at the best schools — and the government-run Indian Institutes of Technology are among the world's most competitive, with top-level professors and elaborate facilities — there are problems.

The brutal competition to get into these universities means ambitious students can spend a year or more in private cram schools, giving up everything to study full-time for the entrance exams.

Instruction is by rote learning, and only test scores count.

"Everything else is forgotten: the capacity to think, to write, to be logical, to get along with people," Pai said. The result is smart, well-educated people who can have trouble with such professional basics as working on a team or good phone manners.

"The focus," he said, "is cram, cram, cram, cram."

Things are different at the Infosys campus.

"The premier concern in college was to get maximum marks," said Sanjay Joshi, a 22-year-old engineer midway through Infosys' training course. "Here, the focus is totally on learning."

Much of that learning is technical, mostly focusing on programming. But "soft skills" classes, as they're called, also include such things as e-mail etiquette and problem-solving.

Then there are off-hours. The average age on campus is 22 and for some of them it's their first time away from home. There's a soccer field, a cricket field, a swimming pool with a juice bar, a bowling alley and a gym. There are racks of bicycles to ride.

You could drown in politeness. "Ride Carefully" a sign warns bicyclists at a gentle curve in the road; "Enjoy your visit," a passing student tells a visitor.

Everywhere, there are well-groomed, well-mannered young people.

On a recent morning, students filed into a large classroom for a programming course.

By 8:45 a.m. — 15 minutes before class began — the room was nearly full. Row after row of students sat quietly, waiting for the teacher.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/industry/2007-04-06-india-workers_N.htm?csp=34
 
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India Forex Reserves $199.179B; Up $1.433B In Wk To March 30
Fri, Apr 6 2007
http://www.djnewswires.com/eu

India Forex Reserves $199.179B; Up $1.433B In Wk To March 30

MUMBAI (Dow Jones)--India's foreign exchange reserves rose $1.433 billion in the week ended March 30, central bank data showed Friday.

The Reserve Bank of India's weekly statistical supplement showed reserves rose due to a $1.532 billion increase in the bank's foreign currency assets, but gold reserves fell $99 million during the week.

Reserves have risen $47.557 billion during the past 12 months and, at $199.179 billion, now well exceed the country's gross external debt, which totaled $142.7 billion at the end of December 2006.

The government is now considering using part of the foreign exchange reserves to fund long-term infrastructure projects.

India will need investment of $320 billion during the next five years to improve the quality of the country's infrastructure to match global standards, according to government estimates.

The RBI doesn't provide a reason for the changes in foreign currency assets, but said the assets expressed in dollar terms capture fluctuations in the value of non-U.S. currencies - such as the euro, sterling and yen - held in reserves.

The following figures are in millions of dollars:


March 30 Change
2007 Over Week Over Year

Foreign Currency $191,924 +$1,532 +$46,816
Gold $6,784 -$99 +$1,029
SDRs $2 -- -$1
Reserve With IMF $469 -- -$287
TOTAL $199,179 +$1,433 +$47,557

-By New Delhi Bureau; Dow Jones Newswires; 91 981-060-2808; djin.in@dowjones.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

April 06, 2007 08:10 ET (12:10 GMT)
 
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Nissan Plans $3,000 Car For India
Ruth David, 04.06.07

Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn has big plans for the Indian market, where he plans to launch a small car with a rock-bottom sticker price under $3,000.

“If you want to be serious in India, you should not cross the $3,000 figure,” Ghosn, who is also the CEO of Renault (other-otc: RNSD - news - people ), told reporters at Nashik in west India.

Nissan will be in a race to the bottom of the price charts with Indian automobile maker Tata Motors (nyse: TTM - news - people ). Next year, it intends to bring a car to market that will sell for 100,000 rupees ($2,300), making it by far India’s -- and the world's -- cheapest car. (See: " The Next People's Car")

It hopes to entice the country’s 45 million drivers of scooters and motorcycles to step up to a larger vehicle.

Small cars account for three-quarters of automobile sales in India, which is Asia’s fourth-largest automobile market.

The cheapest car in India at present is the Maruti 800, which sells for about $4,500. Maruti, which has about 50% of the Indian car market, is controlled by Japan's Suzuki Motor.

Ghosn, whose Renault and Nissan (nasdaq: NSANY - news - people ) partner with Mahindra and Mahindra here, said it is difficult to succeed at low-cost manufacturing without an India base. “There is something unique about the frugality in engineering and management here that we would like to learn from.”

Ghosn was in India this week to launch a plant that will produce Renault’s economy Logan car, which it developed for Eastern Europe and other developing regions.

Last month, Ghosn announced he was giving up oversight of Nissan’s North America’s operations to focus on getting the company’s finances back on track (See: “ One Less Job For Nissan’s Ghosn”). Nissan had announced in February that it wouldn’t meet its targets for this fiscal.

“The Logan production has commenced a month ahead of schedule and at 15% lower than projected costs,” he said.

Mahindra Renault’s Nashik facility has a capacity of 50,000 vehicles a year. Logan is difficult to make in high-cost European markets, so India is the best choice, Ghosn said. The base model of the gasoline-powered version of Logan will cost $9,700 here, and the diesel version will retail for $12,400, Mahindra Renault said in a statement.

Logan, one of Renault’s most profitable cars, is now made mainly in Romania.

Foreign carmakers including General Motors (nyse: GM - news - people ), Volkswagen, Hyundai and Toyota (nyse: TM - news - people ) are making a concerted push into India, which is seeing fast economic growth but still has a tiny number of drivers compared to developed countries.

Mahindra Renault and Nissan are investing $900 million to build a production plant in the south Indian city of Chennai. The plant, which will be ready in the second half of 2009, will have the capacity to manufacture about 400,000 vehicles, including the Logan.

http://www.forbes.com/business/2007...ts-equity-cx_rd_0406markets1.html?partner=rss
 
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Make India a developed nation by 2020

New Delhi, April 5 Make India a developed nation by 2020, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam said Thursday, while paying rich tributes to former deputy prime minister Babu Jagjivan Ram.

'Let us now resolve to transform India into a developed nation before 2020 as our nation's second vision after independence,' said Kalam, delivering the Babu Jagjivan Ram centenary lecture at the Vigyan Bhavan here.

'By this singular resolve, we will be paying the greatest homage to Babu Jagjivan Ram, who is an example of development politics and who saw in political power an opportunity to transform people's life and promote their welfare by bold and well thought out plans.'

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and others also spoke highly of Jagjivan Ram, affectionately called Babuji, marking the beginning of his birth centenary celebrations.

'By tackling issues on labour and employment front, Babu Jagjivan Ram added to industrial peace and productivity of the nation and its new enterprises created by other visionaries like Jamsetji Tata,' said Kalam.

A freedom fighter and social reformer from the backward classes of Bihar, Jagjivan Ram served as a minister with various portfolios for more than 40 years and had an uninterrupted representation in parliament.

Former diplomat L.M. Singhvi said the government should consider conferring the Bharat Ratna posthumously to Jagjivan Ram to commemorate his contributions to the nation.

'His life and work fulfils in an exceptional and incomparable measure the criterion of distinguished and outstanding public service for the Bharat Ratna. To confer the honour on him would be to recognise the Gandhian dimension of the national discourse for Dalit welfare,' Singhvi observed.

As far back as in 1935, Jagjivan Ram was instrumental in establishing the All India Depressed Classes League, an organization dedicated to attaining equality for Dalits.

In the early 1940s, he was imprisoned twice for his active participation in the Satyagraha and Quit India movements.

As the youngest minister in Jawaharlal Nehru's provisional government in 1946, he was part of the prestigious high profile Indian delegation that attended the international conference on labour in Geneva.

In Indira Gandhi's government, he worked as minister for labour, employment, rehabilitation and food and agriculture.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/48140.html
 
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