From Vodafone Idea's AGR moratorium and concerns over telecom duopoly to urban governance failures, global trade disruptions and India's openness to capital, here is today's opinion newsletter
From the finance ministry came a mix of revenue-raising and trade-defence actions. Taxes on tobacco products will increase from the beginning of next month
Even though the AI bubble could be a challenge, emerging technologies are being used for risk modelling that can help manage unplanned changes
The Indore water tragedy exposes deep flaws in urban governance, revealing how capacity gaps and inequality persist despite funds, schemes, and "clean city" rankings
The five-year AGR moratorium gives Vodafone Idea crucial breathing space, but raises questions on fair competition and a level playing field in India's telecom sector
Tariffs have been weaponised. They are now tools for reconfiguring global trade and foreign policy
While factories faced headwinds, Indian finance gained ground in the eyes of global strategic capital
The National Commission rejected the builder's defence that promises made in the brochure were unenforceable as they had not been incorporated in the agreement of sale
If these are the three challenges, there are also three key developments that everyone will watch out for
Here are the best of Business Standard's opinion pieces for today
You'd think the decade of 1985-95 is long over. Not really. The issues that erupted in that decade are still shaping Indian conversations
At the core of this momentum is the vision of 'Amrit Kaal' - a transformational two-decade road map towards 'Viksit Bharat', fuelled by aggressive development and youth empowerment
A superstar cricketer getting dropped from the India team has been pretty rare -almost a Black Swan event
TV has come a long way since its first avatar in 1926 - and its purpose is being re-imagined once again
After years of soaring markets and ignored risks, 2026 could test investor complacency as geopolitics, AI hype, policy volatility and debt push the global economy towards turbulence
There's more to Digvijaya Singh than just a closet Hindutva-vadi at best and a rabid anti-RSS politician at worst
Banks exist to serve the customers, let us serve them well
Indian companies, on aggregate, remain among the most disciplined in capital spending and manage some of the strongest balance sheets in the world
With a batting line-up of infra spending, digital strength and manufacturing, the index is geared for a high-scoring second innings of long-term growth
From a closed economy to a global contender, the Sensex at 40 mirrors India's economic transformation, resilience through crises, and the power of long-term compounding