He noted that since about 2003, India has been growing at an average rate of about 7% and the first five years of the Modi government was characterised by 7.5% growth on an average
In the wake of the virus outbreak, many airlines, including Indian carriers, have cancelled some overseas flights
The Ministry of Finance and the Reserve Bank of India signed a Monetary Policy Framework Agreement on February 20, 2015
The math of index inclusion flows depends mainly on the global fixed income benchmarks that could consider India eligible for inclusion; and, the scale/mode of issuance of the new "special securities"
US President Donald Trump is expected to visit India in February, raising hopes that he will give New Delhi some leeway on trade.
Fiscal deficits have exceeded the government's plan, S&P said, adding it expect limited consolidation over the next few years
Here's a selection of Business Standard Opinion pieces for the day.
In Lok Sabha, PM Modi also exhorted all the members to give suggestions on ways to take advantage of opportunities thrown up by the current global economic situation.
What the Budget does to revive demand will determine if the economy can shrug off slowdown and regain momentum.
AI is expected to have a huge impact not only in commerce, but also in health, national security, cybersecurity, food security, education and global warming
India has got its political arrangements right but not its economic ones to earn dividends for avoiding wars.
Georgieva, who served as the World Bank's chief executive officer before moving to the IMF in October, has made reversing inequalities one of her top priorities
What should the government do?
A New Year resolution for our policy-makers
Where is the Sensex headed? will the economy turn around? what about sectors like auto, pharma, consumer goods and infra? Business Standard tells you what to expect in the new year
India, once the poster child of economic growth in the developing world, grew at the slowest pace in six years during the July-September quarter.
At the start of the decade, the government was busy infusing stimulus packages to revive various sectors affected by the global credit crisis
India's economic growth fell to an over six-year low of 4.5 per cent in the September quarter
The most important policy issue today is how the government can stop spending taxpayers money on labour and financial markets so that the real or production sector can pick up.
Well beyond Modinomics or Modipolitics, India seems to be facing a structural challenge of its economic model whose evidences can be seen every day on the ground in the countryside