![]() Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Tuesday, July 16, 2002 |
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OPINION EDITORIAL Disinvestment jockeying A SPECIAL INVESTMENT vehicle for government holdings in public enterprises is neither new nor would it achieve anything that changed rules of delegation of government business cannot achieve under the existing framework. The Disinvestment ... More ECONOMY Will Mr Jaswant Singh keep his promise? AS the economy is in the midst of the second quarter of this fiscal, hopes run high that the much-delayed recovery, currently under way, would get beefed up and duly consolidated as the months unfold with the new Finance Minister, Mr Jaswant ... More PSU PSU chiefs: Entries and exits With continuous onslaught which the PSU top brass never could enjoy and, therefore had to endure the chieftains seem to have "decided to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all-powerful to b e impotent. The public sector is like a vintage Rolls Royce. It is the best machine in the world but one is not quite sure what to do with it on unsuitable terrain. More LIFESTYLE NEWSPAPERS & PUBLISHING
Socialism in search of renewalTWO socialist weeklies which were once a source of enjoyment and nourishment for believers and sceptics alike are struggling to survive. The New Stateman, under Kingsley Martin, boasted a readership approaching 100,000 and included a line ... More CREDIT RATING The rise of rating agencies THEY were the high priests cloistered behind steel-glass-walled skyscrapers. Their predictive capabilities were reported to have been powered by advanced mathematical and computing techniques. They rubbed shoulders with big corporations, banks, ... More CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT CRM solution Lever to lift B2B enterprise "CATCHING up to where others have been is necessary to stay in the game, but the winner will be those companies who have the ability to invent fundamentally new games." Gary Hamel This statement clearly indicates the need to ... More RAILWAYS 150 years of Indian Railways It kept the Raj on economic track The railway policy was meant to serve British economic and political interest. This is not to mean that the Indian Railways have not contributed to the transport sector. In these 150 years, it has achieved a great deal. But not what it promised. More LETTERS Comments & Letters to the Editor to: bleditor@thehindu.co.in Subscribe to: Business Line |
Top Stories In Depth Gender Justice Simple Economics Guide to derivatives Looking back Jul. 7-Jul. 13 Is the dollar correction over? HIV/AIDS in Manipur: In the `state' of despair What a teacher's son has taught Jayalalithaa: In the eye of another storm Making cargo `simple', British Airways way |
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