Search Result for : Domestic Factor

No MEIS benefit on guar gum products is impacting its exports

Aamir H Kaki  The modest and humble guar gum, a low-value crop grown on marginal land got transformed into one that can generate substantial income for farmers in recent years. The modest seed mostly harvested in the tropical regions of India (Rajasthan, Haryana and Gujarat) and Pakistan, used as a food crop for animals, gained international fame due to its viscosity. The innocuous looking seed/powder transformed into a product that can generate substantial income for processors, manufacturers, traders and farmers. Owing to its usefulness in food, paper, textile and in the gas and oil industries India’s export of guar gum powder, saw a steep increase from a mere $84.7 million in 2001-02 to $3,930 million in 2012-13, becoming the largest agricultural export ...

Automation, H1-B, ebbing growth: Culprits of layoffs in Indian IT

The Dollar Business Bureau As growth slows for India’s $150 billion IT industry, many IT majors have begun to lay-off mid and senior level employees to account for tapering revenue growth. The probable tightening of H1-B visas under Trump’s reign is also a strong motivator for companies to hire locally for projects based outside India. The global and domestic factors have together concocted a nightmare for IT professionals in India. As a result of automation and increasing use of bots, fruits of cutting edge research in machine learning and artificial intelligence, the IT industry is well poised to replace a huge chunk of its human capital with machines. The threat, which commentators have been worrying about for more than a decade, is ...

Global turbulence behind market crash, impact temporary: FM

Source: PTI Attributing the stock market crash to global turbulence, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Monday said the government and RBI were watching the situation and hoped that things will stabilise once the transient impact is over. "There has been for the last few days a great amount of turbulence which was being caused in the global markets. Obviously that turbulence has had impact on Indian market itself. The factors responsible for this are entirely external. “There is not a single domestic factor in India which has either contributed to it or added to it. These are external factors. I have not the least doubt that this turbulence is transient and temporary in nature. The markets will settle down,” he said. ...