)
The Business Standard Editorial Comment lays out the paper's insights and position on issues that are important to various segments, from policymakers to corporates to analysts, even political leaders. These appear in the form of editorials on the newspaper's Opinion page, and online under the Opinion segment. These opinion pieces truly embody the newspaper's 'Insight Out' brand positioning.
The Business Standard Editorial Comment lays out the paper's insights and position on issues that are important to various segments, from policymakers to corporates to analysts, even political leaders. These appear in the form of editorials on the newspaper's Opinion page, and online under the Opinion segment. These opinion pieces truly embody the newspaper's 'Insight Out' brand positioning.
Political yatras are not an end in themselves. Rahul Gandhi will need a clear purpose if his yatra is to be judged successful
The Election Commission of India should be careful when altering the rules of the election game
Development of Prachanda helicopters by HAL is encouraging
Stubble burning can make plans ineffective
New Delhi must craft a consistent position on the war
It is best to stick to tried and tested methods of reviving growth - deregulation, macroeconomic stability, and targeted investment
5G should work for all stakeholders
Global developments need careful monitoring
DART can reduce risks from meteors
Extension of PMGKAY should have been avoided
There's no dearth of high-quality corporate stories to keep investors interested, but a drop in valuations is likely if the international outlook worsens further
India's trade policy needs to expand on what 'self-reliance' means
Mitigation policies should include adaptation measures
RBI should review its currency management
Europe's decisive swing to the right continues
Any dialogue between the powerful parent organisation of the ruling party and representatives of the minority community should be welcomed
The worst may be over, but the threat persists
ASBA-like system will benefit retail investors
Exemptions in the draft Bill are too broad and need to be more narrowly defined
Its new domicile policy will weaken the delicate mechanisms of federalism that allow any Indian citizen to seek employment anywhere in the country