Sunday, October 11, 2009

Nobel Prizes 2009

The Nobel Prize in Physics 2009
1. Charles K. Kao (China): For groundbreaking achievements concerning the transmission of light in fibers for optical communication.
2. Willard S. Boyle (USA) and
3. George E. Smith (USA): For the invention of an imaging semiconductor circuit – the CCD sensor
____________________________________________________________
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2009
1. Venkatraman Ramakrishnan
(United Kingdom)
2. Thomas A. Steitz (USA) and
3. Ada E. Yonath (Israel): For studies of the structure and function of the ribosome
____________________________________________________________
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2009
1. Elizabeth H. Blackburn (USA)
2. Carol W. Greider (USA) and
3. Jack W. Szostak (USA): For the discovery of how chromosomes are protected by telomeres and the enzyme telomerase.
____________________________________________________________
The Nobel Prize in Literature 2009
Herta Müller (Germany): Who, with the concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose, depicts the landscape of the dispossessed.
____________________________________________________________
The Nobel Peace Prize 2009
Barack Obama
(USA): For his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.

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Saturday, October 10, 2009

Memory Flash Points

  • The Chairperson of the Children Film Society is Nandita Das.
  • India defeated South Africa to clinch the Emerging Player Tournament on August 1, 2009 in Brisbane.
  • “Swaranajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana” has been restructured under a new nomenclature National Livelihood Mission.
  • India's Deep Joshi, who has done pioneering work for rural communities on August 3, 2009 was named along with five others for the Prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award for 2009- considered Asia's equivalent of the Nobel prize.
  • N. Rangbashyam, a Chennai based surgical gastroenterologist has been nominated to the Wall of Honour of the Royal Society of Medicine UK.
  • The National Solar Mission, recently approved by the Prime Minister's National Action Plan on Climate Change envisages 10 year tax holiday for solar plants- both photovoltaic and thermal set up by 2020.
  • World Tiger Summit will be held in 2010 at Ranthambore (Rajsthan).
  • India and the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) , 2009 signed a Free Trade Agreement in Bangkok after 6 years' negotiations.
  • Environmental activist and Director of Centre for Science and Environment Sunita Narain has been chosen for the Raja Lakshmi Award- 2009 instituted by the Shri Raja Lakshmi Foundation, Chennai.
  • The Special Representatives of India and China M.K. Narayanan and Dai Bingguo began the 13th round of talks on the boundary issue with a wider ambit in New Delhi on August 7, 2009.
  • India will hold joint military exercise Cope-09 with United States that would see for the first time the deployment of the C-17 Globemaster, a heavy lift military trasport aircraft.
  • Kolkata Open Grandmaster Chess Tournament to be held in September 2009 is the strongest ever Open Chess Championship in Asia with 124 players from 18 countries taking part.
  • The number of drought hit districts in the country as declared by the government is 246 of 600 odd disctricts in 10 states.
  • NASA has teamed up with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) to locate water - ice on Moon. During their recent Bi-static experiment, both NASA and ISRO through instruments on board ISRO's Chandrayan and NASA's Lunar Reconnaisance Orbiter (LRO) trained their radars to a specific point to locate water- ice on the floor of permanently shadowed craters of moon.
  • Indra Nooyi (Ranked 3rd), Sonia Gandhi (Ranked 13th), Chanda Kochhar (Ranked 20th) and Kiran Mazumdar Shaw (Ranked 91st) have been named among the world's 100 most powerful women by Forbes magazine.

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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Slumdog Millionaire makes a sweep at the Oscars

"Slumdog Millionaire", the rags-to-riches story of a Mumbai slum dweller, had a golden run at the Oscars on Monday sweeping eight awards with two going to music maestro A R Rahman, the first Indian to achieve the historic feat.

43-year-old Rahman bagged Oscars for Original Score in the film, named the best at the 81st Academy Awards, and along with veteran lyricist Gulzar also won the Best Song award for the foot-tapping number 'Jai ho'.

Following is the list of winners at the 81st Academy Awards:

Best Picture: "Slumdog Millionaire"

Best Director: Danny Boyle ("Slumdog Millionaire")

Best Actor: Sean Penn ("Milk")

Best Actress: Kate Winslet ("The Reader")

Best Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger (posthumously for "The Dark Knight")

Best Supporting Actress: Penelope Cruz ("Vicky Cristina Barcelona")

Best Foreign Film: "Departures" (Japan)

Best Adapted Screenplay: Simon Beaufoy ("Slumdog Millionaire")

Best Original Screenplay: Dustin Lance Black ("Milk")

Best Animated Feature Film: "WALL-E"

Best Art Direction: "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button"

Best Cinematography: Anthony Dod Mantle ("Slumdog Millionaire")

Best Sound Mixing: Resul Pookutty with Ian Tapp and Richard Pryke ("Slumdog Millionaire")

Best Sound Editing: "The Dark Knight"

Best Original Score: A R Rahman ("Slumdog Millionaire")

Best Original Song: 'Jai ho' ("Slumdog Millionaire", music by A R Rahman and lyrics by Gulzar)

Best Costume: Michael O'Connor ("The Duchess")

Best Documentary Feature: "Man on Wire"

Best Documentary (short subject): "Smile Pinki"

Best Film Editing: "Slumdog Millionaire"

Best Makeup: "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button"

Best Animated Short Film: "La Maison en Petits Cubes"

Best Live Action Short Film: "Spielzeugland" (Toyland)

Best Visual Effects: "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button"

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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Saraswati Samman 2008 conferred to Assamese writer Lakshmi Nandan Bora

Noted Assamese writer Lakshmi Nandan Bora will be honoured with the prestigious Saraswati Samman for 2008 this year i.e. in 2009 for his novel 'Kayakalpa'.

The award, instituted by the K K Birla Foundation in 1991, is given every year for an outstanding literary work in any Indian language mentioned in the schedule VIII of the Constitution and published during the past 10 years.

The award carries a cash prize of Rs five lakh.

Bora, who won the Sahitya Akademi award for his 1986 novel 'Patal Bhairavi', is considered as one of the foremost men of letters in Assam today.

'Kayakalpa' was chosen for the award after consideration of works published in 22 Indian languages by a selection committee headed by former Chief Justice of India G B Patnaik.

Past Recipients:

* 1991 - Harivanshrai 'Bachchan' for his autobiography in four volumes
* 1992 - Ramakant Rath
* 1993 - Vijay Tendulkar
* 1994 - Harbhajan Singh
* 1995 - Balamani Amma for poetry collection Nivedyam
* 1996 - Shamsur Rahman Faruqi for She`r-e Shor-Angez
* 1997 - Manubhai Pancholi
* 1998 - Shankha Ghosh for his anthology Gandharba Kabitaguccha
* 1999 - Indira Parthasarathy
* 2000 - Manoj Das for his novel Amrita Phala (The Nectar Fruit)
* 2001 - Dalip Kaur Tiwana for her novel Katha Kaho Urvashi
* 2002 - Mahesh Elkunchwar for his play Yugant
* 2003 - Govind Chandra Pande for his collection of 163 Sanskrit poems entitled Bhagirathi
* 2004 - Sunil Gangopadhyay for his novel Pratham Alo
* 2005 - K. Ayyappa Panicker for his collection of poems Ayyappa Panikarude Kritikal
* 2006 - Jagannath Prasad Das for his collection of poems Parikrama written in Oriya
* 2007 - Naiyer Masud for his collection of short stories Taoos Chaman Ki Myna (The Myna from Peacock Garden) written in Urdu
* 2008 - Lakshmi Nandan Bora for his novel Kayakalpa written in Assamese

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Bharat Ratna conferred to Bhimsen Joshi

Eminent exponent of Hindustani classical music Pandit Bhimsen Joshi was officially conferred the "Bharat Ratna' on 10th February, 2009 at his residence in Pune by a President's emissary.

Following is the list of Bharat Ratna awardees since its institution in 1954:

1) Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan (1954)
2) Chakravarti Rajagopalachari (1954)
3) C V Raman (1954)
4) Bhagwan Das (1955)
5) Mokshagundam Visvesvarayya (1955)
6) Jawaharlal Nehru (1955)
7) Govind Ballabh Pant (1957)
8) Dhondo Keshav Karve (1958)
9) Dr B C Roy (1961)
10) Purushottam Das Tandon (1961)
11) Dr Rajendra Prasad (1962)
12) Dr Zakir Hussain (1963)
13) Pandurang Vaman Kane (1963)
14) Lal Bahadur Shastri (1966)
15) Indira Gandhi (1971)
16) V V Giri (1975)
17) K Kamaraj (1976)
18) Mother Teresa (1980)
19) Acharya Vinoba Bhave (1983)
20) Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (1987)
21) M G Ramachandran (1988)
22) B R Ambedkar (1990)
23) Nelson Mandela (1990)
24) Rajiv Gandhi (1991)
25) Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (1991)
26) Morarji Desai (1991)
27) Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (1992)
28) J R D Tata (1992)
29) Satyajit Ray (1992)
30) A P J Abdul Kalam (1997)
31) Gulzarilal Nanda (1997)
32) Aruna Asaf Ali (1997)
33) M S Subbulakshmi (1998)
34) Chidambaram Subramaniam (1998)
35) Jayaprakash Narayan (1998)
36) Pandit Ravi Shankar (1999)
37) Amartya Sen (1999)
38) Gopinath Bordoloi (1999)
39) Lata Mangeshkar (2001)
40) Ustad Bismillah Khan (2001)
41) Pandit Bhimsen Joshi (2008)

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Thursday, February 5, 2009

Mawsynram vs Waialeale

Mawsynram, 9 km from Sohra, more famous by its erstwhile name Cherrapunjee, is the wettest place on earth. Over the last few years, it received an average rainfall of 467.4 inches of rain. Both these places are in Meghalaya. Now, Mawsynram’s position is under challenge from a mountain in Hawaii.

Sohra, which receives 450 inches of rain annually, is not even the second-wettest place on earth.
It has been upstaged by Mount Waialelale on the Hawaii Islands, which gets 460 inches of rain every year. The US has been pushing Mt Waialeale for quite some time now. It rains almost every day, albeit lightly, on that 5,148 ft mount owing to marine conditions. But the fact is, Sohra and Mawsynram record more rainfall during the monsoon and while the rainfall area on Mt Waialeale is 5 sq km, Sohra-Mawsynram is over 200 sq km.

Meteorologists agree that Sohra has been recording less rainfall in recent years- 11,414.6 mm or 449.4 inches in 2008 compared to 14,790.8 mm or 582.31 inches in 2004. Ditto with Mawsynram, where rainfall records are maintained periodically. There isn’t much deviation in the average annual rainfall but the spread is less. Deforestation has turned much of the Sohra area into a rocky, barren expanse, and this could eventually dent Mawsynram’s record. Along with local organisations, green measures are being promoted in the area. The Khasi Students’ Union, too, is pulling its weight to help Sohra regain its rainier-than-Mt Waialeale record.

Ecologists are blaming it on global warming and on local factors like deforestation and limestone quarrying. But they aren’t ready to concede “defeat” yet.

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Saturday, January 31, 2009

Superlatives- India

Highest Airport- Leh Air Port in Ladakh (3256 m/ 16080 ft high)
Largest Auditorium- Sri Shanmukhananda Hall, Mumbai
Largest Public Sector Bank- State Bank of india
Largest Botanical Garden - National Botanical Gardens in Kolkata
Longest River Bridge- Mahatma Gandhi Setu over the Ganga at Patna (5,575 m/ 8286 ft long)
Longest Sea Bridge- Anna Indira Gandhi Bridge connecting the island of Rameswaram with Mandapam in Tamil Nadu (2.34 km long)
Biggest Cantilever Bridge- Rabindra Setu (also called Howrah Bridge), Hoogli river in Kolkata (457 m/1499 ft long)
Longest Canal- Indira Gandhi Canal or Rajasthan Canal (959 km long)
Largest Cave- Amarnath (about 44 km from Pahalgam in Jammu and Kashmir)
Largest Cave Temple- Ellora (Maharashtra)
Oldest Church- St Thomas Church at Palayar in Trichur district in Kerala built in 52 AD.
Largest Church- Se Cathedral at old Goa, 10 km from Panaji.
Most Populous City- Mumbai
Longest Corridor- Corridor in Ramanathaswamy Temple at Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu ( 1220 m /4002 ft long)
Highest Dam- Bhakra Dam on Sutlej river in Punjab (226 m/ 738 ft high and 518 m/ 1699 ft long)
Longest Dam- Hirakund Dam on Mahanadi river in Orissa (24.4 km long)
Largest Delta- Sunderbans (75,000 sq km) formed by the Ganga and Brahmaputra in West Bengal and Bangladesh.
Largest Dome- Gol Gumbuz, Bijapur in Karnataka.
Highest Gateway Buland Darwaza at Fatehpur Sikri near Agra. Built by Akbar (53.5 m /175 ft High)
Longest Glacier- Siachen Glacier on the Indo-pakistan border (75.6 km long and 2.8 km wide)
Largest Gurudwara- Golden Temple at Amritsar
Highest Hydel Power Station- Rongtong Hydel Project in Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh.
Largest Lake- Wular lake, Kashmir
Largest Fresh Water Lake-Kolleru in Andhra Pradesh
Largest Library- National Library, Kolkata
Oldest Monastery- Buddhist Monastery, (situated at an altitude of 3,048 m /10,000 ft) at Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh.
Largest Mosque- Jama Masjid , Delhi (built by Shah Jahan in 1644-58)
Highest Mountain Peak- Kanchenjunga
Largest Museum- Indian Museum, Kolkata.
Largest Planetarium- Birla Planetarium, Kolkata.
Largest Prison- Tihar Jail, Delhi
Longest Railway Bridge- Dehri-on-Sone Railway bridge over the Sone river near Sasaram on Kolkata-Delhi main line Longest Passenger Train Route Jammu Tawi-Kanyakumari (3730 km) Fastest Train Shatabdi Express between New Delhi and Bhopal at a speed on 140 kmph
Longest Railway Platform- Kharagpur in West Bengal (833 m /2733 ft). Also world's longest Largest Refinery IOC Refinery at Koyah (Gujarat)
Largest Tribe- Gond
Largest Concentration of Scheduled Tribes- Madhya Pradesh
Largest Scheduled Caste- Community Chamar
Longest River- Ganga (2640 km long)
Longest Road- Grand Trunk Road from Kolkata to Delhi
Highest Road- Road at Khardungla in the Leh-Manali Sector
Largest State in Area- Rajasthan
Smallest State in Area- Goa
Most Populated State- Uttar Pradesh
Least Populated State- Sikkim
Most Densely Populated State- West Bengal
Least Densely Populated State- Arunachal Pradesh
Most Literate State- Kerala .
Most Women State- Kerala
Tallest Statue- Statue of Jain Saint Gomateswara at Sravanabelagola in Karnataka.
Largest Stupa- Great Stupa of Sanchi, Madhya Pradesh
Largest Tunnel- Jawahar Tunnel, Banihal Pass (Jammu and Kashmir) Largest Union Territory in Area- Andaman and Nicobar Island (8,249 sq km)
Smallest Union Territory in Area- Lakshadweep (32 sq km)
Most Populated Union Territory- Delhi (1,37, 82,976) Least Populated Union Territory- Lakshadweep (60,595)
Most Literate Union Territory- Lakshadweep
Highest Waterfall- Jog Waterfall, Karnataka
Largest Zoo- Zoological Gardens, Kolkata

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Superlatives- World

The Biggest
City (in area)- Mount Isa, Queensland (Australia) (41,225 sq km)
Country (in area)- Russia
Dam- Grand Be (USA)
Dome- Gol Gumbaz (lndia)
Irrigation Scheme- Llyod Barrage (Pakistan)
Island- Greeland (Renamed Kalaallit Nunaat)
Library- National Kie Library (CIS)
Museum- American Museum of Natural History, New York
Ocean - Pacific
Palace- Vatican (ltaly)
Planet - Jupiter

The Highest
Airport- Lhasa (Tibet)
Dam- The Grands (Switzerland)
Mountain Range- Himalayas (Asia)
Waterfall- Angel (Venezuela)
City- Wenchuan (China)
Mountain Peak- Everest (Nepal)
Road- Leh Nobra Road (India)

The Largest
Archipelago- Indonesia (3,000 islands)
City (population) - Tokyo (Japan)
Country (population) - China
Dam- Grand Coulee-concrete Dam (USA)
Desert- Sahara Desert (Africa)
Forest - Coniferous forest of Northern CIS
Island- Greenland
Lake (Salt Water)- Caspian Sea
Mountain Range- The Andes (South America)
Railway Platform- Kharagpur, West Bengal (lndia)
Sea- South China Sea
Temple- Angkor Vat (Kampuchea)
Bird- Ostrich
Continent- Asia
Creature- Blue Whale
Delta- Sundarbans (lndia)
Electorate- India
Gulf- Gulf of Mexico
Lake (Fresh Water)- Lake Superior (Canada)
Mosque- Jama Masjid, Delhi (India)
Peninsula- Arabia (Area-3,250,000 sq km)
Satellite- Titan (Satellite of Saturn)
Sea Bird- Albatross
Zoo- Etosha Reserve (South West Africa)

The Longest
Epic- Mahabharata
Platform- Kharagpur (India)
River- Nile
Mountain Range- Andes (South America)
Railway- Trans Siberian Railway
Wall- Great Wall of China

The Smallest
Bird- Humming Bird
Planet- Mercury
Country- Vatican City (in area)

The Tallest
Animal- Giraffe
Minaret- Sultan Hassan Mosque (Egypt)
Statue- Motherland, Volgograd (Russia)
Fountain- Fountain Hills (Arizona)
Minaret (Free standing)- Qutab Minar, Delhi

Miscellaneous
Fastest Animal- The Peregrine Falcon
Coldest Place- Polyus Nedostupnosti (in Antarctica)
Hottest Place- Azizia (Libya)
Brightest Planet- Venus
Fastest Bird- Swift
Driest Place- Death Valley (California)
Rainiest Place- Masynram near Cherrapunji (lndia)
Brightest Star- Sirius (also called the Dog Star)

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Changed Names of Cities, States and Countries

Old Name- New Name
Abyssinia- Ethiopia
Angora- Ankara
Aurgangabad- Sambhaji Nagar
Banaras- Varanasi
Baroda- Vadodara
Batavia- Jakarta
Basutoland- Lesothe
Bachunaland: Bostwana
Bombay- Mumbai
British Guiana- Guyana
Burma- Myanmar
Calicut - Kozhikode
Cape Canaveral- Cape Kennedy
Cawnpore- Kanpur
Ceylon- Sri Lanka
Central Provinces- Madhya Pradesh
Christina- Oslo
Cochin- Kochi
Congo- Zaire
Constantinople- Istanbul
Dacca- Dhaka
Dahomey- Benin
Dutch East Indies- Indonesia
Dutch Guyana- Suriname
East Timor- Loro Sae
Egypt- United Arab Republic
Ellice Islands- Tuvalu
Formosa- Taiwan
Gauhati- Guwahati
Gold Coast- Ghana
Holland- The Netherlands
Ivory Coast- Cote D' Ivoire
Japan- Nippon
Jubbulpore- Jabalpur
Jullundur- Jalandhar
Leopildville- Kinshasa
Madagascar- Malagasy
Madras- Chennai
Malaya- Malaysia
Manchukuo- Manchuria
Mesopotamia- Iraq
New Hebrides- Vanuatu
Northern Rhodesia- Zambia
Nyasaland- Malawi
Ooty- Udhagamandalam
Panjim- Panaji
Peking- Beijing
Petrograd- Leningrad
Persia- Iran
Poona- Pune
Quilon- Kollam
Rangoon- Yangon
Rhodesia (Southern)- Zimbabwe
Saigon- Ho Chi Minh City
Salisburg- Harare
Sandwich Islands- Hawaiian Islands
Siam- Thailand
Simla- Shimla
South West Africa- Narnibia
Spanish Guinea- Equatorial Guinea
Stalingrad- Volgograd
Tanganyka and Zanzibar- Tanzania
Tanjore- Thanjavur
Trichur- Thrissur
Trivandrum- Thiruvananthapuram
United Provinces- Uttar Pradesh
Upper Volta- Bourkina Faso
Vizagapatnam- Visakhapatnam

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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Padma Awards 2009


The chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Anil Kakodkar, environmentalist Sunderlal Bahuguna, Olympic Gold medalist Abhinav Bindra and MS Dhoni (from left in the pictures) are among 133 personalities honoured with the Padma awards this year.


Kakodkar, who helped bring the Indo-US civil nuclear deal to fruition, ISRO chief Dr G Madhavan Nair, the man behind Chandrayaan, Sister Nirmala of the Missionaries of Charities and the 82-year-old Bahuguna were among the ten to get the Padma Vibhushan.

Ace shooter Abhinav Bindra and Knowledge Commission chairman Sam Pitroda are on the Padma Bhushan list.

Team India cricket captain MS Dhoni, spinner Harbhajan Singh, singer Udit Narayan, actors Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Akshay Kumar, and world billiards champion Pankaj Advani will get the Padma Shri.

Padma Awards, namely, Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan and Padma Shri are given for exceptional and distinguished service in any field including service rendered by Government servants. The recommendations for Padma Awards are received from the State Governments/Union Territory Administrations, Central Ministries/Departments, Institutions of Excellence, etc. which are considered by an Awards Committee. On the basis of the recommendations of the Awards Committee, and after approval of the Home Minister, Prime Minister and President, the Padma Awards are announced on the eve of the Republic Day.

A total of 133 Padma awards were announced — 10 Padma Vibhushan, 30 Padma Bhushan and 93 Padma Shri.

Padma awardees for 2009:

Padma Vibhushan Awardees
Dr Chandrika Prasad Srivastava -- Civil Service
Sunderlal Bahuguna -- Environment
Prof D P Chattopadhyaya -- Literature
Prof Jasbir Singh Bajaj -- Medicine
Dr Purshotam Lal -- Medicine
Govind Narain -- Public Affairs
Dr Anil Kakodkar -- Science
G Madhavan Nair -- Science
Sister Nirmala -- Social Work
Dr A S Ganguly -- Trade & Industry


Padma Bhushan Awardees
G Sivarama Krishna Murthy -- Art
Prof Ramanlal C Mehta -- Art
Shamshad Begum -- Art
V P Dhananjayan & Shanta Dhananjayan -- Art
Dr Vaidyanathan Ganapathi Sthapati -- Art
S.K. Misra -- Civil Service
Shekhar Gupta -- Journalism
Prof. Alappat Sreedhara Menon -- Literature
C.K. Prahlad -- Literature
D. Jayakanthan -- Literature
Dr. Isher Judge Ahluwalia -- Literature
Kunwar Narain -- Literature
Prof. Minoru Hara -- Literature
Ramachandra Guha -- Literature
Dr. Brijendra Kumar Rao -- Medicine
Vaidya Devendra Triguna -- Medicine
Dr. Khalid Hameed -- Medicine
Lt.Gen. (Retd.) Satish Nambiar -- Security Affairs
Dr. Inderjit Kaur Barthakur -- Public Affairs
Dr. Kirit Shantilal Parikh -- Public Affairs
Dr. Bhakta B. Rath -- Science
Shri Conjeevaram Srirangachari Seshadri -- Science
Dr. Gurdip Singh Randhawa -- Science
Sam Pitroda -- Science
Prof. (Dr.) Sarvagya Singh Katiyar -- Science
Prof. Thomas Kailath -- Science
Dr. Naganath Nayakawadi -- Social Work
Dr. Sarojini Varadappan -- Social Work
Abhinav Bindra -- Sports
Anil Manibhai Naik -- Trade & Industry

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Indian Constitution MCQs 1

1. Indian Constitution came into force on:
A. November 26, 1949
B. January 26, 1950
C. September 26, 1949
D. August 15, 1947


2. By whom the Constitution of India was adopted?
A. Parliament of India
B. People of India
C. Constituent Assembly
D. Members of Lok Sabha


3. The chairman of the Drafting Committee of the Constitution of India was:
A. Dr Rajendra Prasad
B. Dr B R Ambedkar
C. Pt Jawaharlal Nehru
D. Shri KM Munshi


4. Who among the following was not a member of the Drafting Committee of the Constitution?
A. Sir Aladi K Ayar
B. Dr Rajendra Prasad
C. NG Ayyangar
D. Dr BR Ambedkar


5. What is the other name of India mentioned in our Constitution?
A. Bharatvarsha
B. Bharat
C. Hindustan
D. No other name


6. The Constitution of India can be said to be:
A. flexible
B. rigid
C. a mixture of rigidity and flexibility
D. None of the above


7. Preamble means:
A. the preface of a book
B. preface, introduction especially that of an act of Parliament stating its aims & objectives
C. the head of a body
D. the top most portion of anything


8. The Preamble of the Indian Constitution serves the purpose of:
A. indicating that the authority of the Government is derived from the people
B. pointing out what the people expect the Government of India to accomplish
C. helping judges to interpret various provisions of the Constitution properly
D. all of the above


9. Which of the following are the ideals set forth in the Preamble?
A. Social, economic and political justice
B. Equality of status and of opportunity
C. Liberty of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship
D. All of these


10. How many times has the Preamble to the Constitution of India been amended?
A. Once
B. Twice
C. Thrice
D. Never


11. The Preamble of the Indian Constitution says:
A. we, the members of the Constituent Assembly…. Adopt enact and give to ourselves this Constitution
B. we, the people of Indian …. Adopt, enact and give to the citizens this Constitution
C. we, the people of India … in our Constituent Assembly .. adopt, enact and give to ourselves this Constitution
D. we, the citizens of India … adopt enact and give to ourselves this Constitution


12. India is a:
A. secular State
B. bilingual State
C. communist State
D. capitalist State


13. What is the literal meaning of secularism?
A. Freedom to worship any God
B. Death of religion
C. Separation of Church from the state
D. None of these


14. Which are the implications of Indian being a secular state?
A. There is no ethnic or religious majority or minority
B. State has no religion of its own
C. Religion will be regarded as a private affair
D. All of the above


15. The term “Secularism” connotes that
A. religions are patronised by the state
B. religion cannot be publicly practised
C. there is no discrimination between religions nor is there any patronisation or condemnations of any religion by the state
D. None of the above is true


16. Match the following features of the Indian Constitution and their sources:
List I: Feature
a. Bill of Rights and Judicial Review
b. Parliamentary System of Democracy
c. Directive Principles
d. Residuary Powers with Centre

List II: Source
1. England
2. Ireland
3. USA
4. Canada

A. 4a, 1b, 2c, 3d
B. 1a, 2b, 3c, 4d
C. 3a, 4b, 2c, 1d
D. 3a, 1b, 2c, 4d


17. Which of the following statements is correct with regard to the structure of the Union Government?
A. It is unitary
B. It is federal
C. It is federal in peace times and unitary in emergencies
D. It is unitary in peace times and federal in emergencies


18. In a federal set-up of government, the powers are divided between the:
A. Centre and the Units
B. Houses of the Legislature
C. Executive and the Legislature
D. President and the Cabinet


19. Which off the following is not the federal feature of the Indian Constitution?
A. There is distribution of Powers in accordance with 2 lists
B. Written and rigid constitution
C. Independent Judiciary
D. All of the above


20. Which of the following provisions in the Constitution make Indian Constitution unitary in sprit?
A. Parliament can make laws for the states under some circumstances
B. Provision for All Indian Services
C. Power to propose amendment in the Constitution are vested only in the Union Parliament
D The authority of the Comptroller and Auditor General
E. All of the above


21. Which of the following are the unitary features of the Constitution?
A. The Proclamation of National Emergency
B. President can take over the administration of any State if constitutional machinery breaks down
C. Single citizenship
D. Single unified judiciary
E. All of the above


22. The Constitution of India borrowed the scheme of Indian Federation from the Constitution of:
A. USA
B. Canada
C. Ireland
D. UK


23. The Constitution of India bears the influence of the constitution of several countries. Which country exerts the greatest influence in the framing of the “Directive Principles of State Policy” in our constitution?
A. Ireland
B. France
C. Japan
D. USSR


24. The Directive Principles of the State Policy:
A. were in the original Constitution
B. forms a separate part of the Constitution
C. were added by the 46the Amendment to the Constitution
D. None of the above is true


25. Which one of the following statements is most appropriate about the Directive Principles of State Policy?
A. They are enforceable in a court of law
B. They are enforced by the President
C. They are enforced by the Law Minister
D. They are fundamental Principles of governance of the country


26. The Directive Principles:
A. aim at establishing welfare state of Gandhian conception
B. aim at giving ideals to be incorporated at a later stage
C. aim at giving support to the Fundamental Rights
D. A and B only


27. What objectives Indian Government is required to pursue in International relations by the Directive Principles?
A. To promote international peace and security
B. To maintain just and honourable relations between nations
C. To foster respect for international law and treaty obligations
D. To encourage settlement of international disputes by arbitration
E. All of the above


28. The part of the Constitution which gives some positive directions to the state as well as the government towards achieving progress and all-round development of the people is known as:
A. Directive Principles of State Policy
B. Citizenship
C. Fundamental Rights

D. Preamble


29. Are the Directive Principles enforceable in the Courts?
A. No
B. Yes
C. Some of them
D. None of these


30. The Directive Principles of State Policy aim at:
A. establishing social and economic justice in the country
B. ensuring the smooth functioning of democracy
C. giving extra-Constitutional power to the Government
D. None of these


31. The purpose behind an adjournment motion is:
A. to get the sitting adjourned
B. to inviter the attention of the House to a matter of urgent public importance
C. to seek recess for the House to discuss urgent matter in groups
D. to postpone introduction of a Bill in the House


32. Given below are two statements, one labelled as Assertion (A) and the other labelled as Reason (R):
Assertion (A): The adoption of Uniform Civil Code, though mentioned in the Constitution of India is yet to be accomplished.
Reason (R): Directive Principles are non-justiciable.
In the context of the above two statements, which one of the following is correct?
A. Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A
B. Both A and R are true but R is not a correct explanation of A
C. A is true but R is false
D. A is false but R is true


33. The concept of welfare State is included in the Constitution of India in the:
A. Directive Principles
B. Fundamental Rights
C. Fundamental Duties
D. Preamble


34. In which of the following ways Indian citizenship can be acquired?
A. By birth
B. By descent
C. By registration
D. By the incorporation of territory
E. All of these


35. Which of the following qualifications are necessary for a person who acquires citizenship by naturalisation in India?
A. He is not subject or citizen of any country where the citizens of Indian are debarred from becoming subjects or citizens of that country by naturalisation
B. That he has given up the citizenship of that country according to the law of that country and has notified to the central government
C. Throughout the period of 12 months immediately preceding the date of application he has either been residing in India or been in the service of India
D. All of the above


36. Can the qualifications of acquiring natural citizenship be waived? Under which conditions can these be waived?
A. Yes, if a person has rendered distinguished service to the cause of science or art, philosophy or literature
B. Yes, if the applicant has rendered service for world peace
C. Yes, if the applicant worked for human progress in general
D. All of the above


37. How can the Indian citizenship be terminated?
A. By renunciation
B. By termination
C. By deprivation
D. All of the above


38. Under what circumstances Indian citizenship can not be terminated?
A. At the time of emergency
B. At the time of war
C. At the time of elections
D. All of these


39. Will a citizen of India who acquires naturalised citizenship of a foreign country lose his Indian citizenship by termination?
A. Yes
B. No
C. if he intimates
D. if he wants to terminate


40. Is there any separate citizenship of State in India?
A. No
B. Yes
C. Under certain circumstances
D. None of the above


41. Which of the following will be considered permanently domiciled in India?
A. Those who have permanent home in India
B. Were born within the territory of India
C. Either of whose parents was born in the territory of India
D. Have been residing in the territory of India for not less than five years before the commencement of the Indian Constitution
E. All of the above


42. Which one is competent to amend the law relating to Indian citizenship?
A. Parliament
B. President
C. Prime Minister
D. Council of Ministers


43. Which of the following is not a qualification for a person to become a citizen of India?
A. To be born in India
B. To descend from parents either of whom is Indian
C. To love in the country for a specified period of time
D. To have some property


44. One who is a good citizen is:
A. aware of his social duties
B. educated
C. a regular tax payer
D. socially and politically well informed


45. Fundamental Rights of the Indian citizens are contained in ____ of the “Indian Constitution”.
A. Part I
B. Part II
C. Part III
D. Part IV


46. Fundamental Rights of the citizens are:
A. non-justiciable
B. justiciable
C. justiciabel if the highest court feels it should be
D. some rights are justiciable while other are not


47. The main principle under the fundamental rights granted to the Indian citizens is to provide them:
A. opportunity for growth and development
B. freedom from exploitation
C. social and economic equality
D. freedom of speech and association


48. Equality before law also means that no man is above law in the country. The only exception made in the Constitution relates to the:
A. President and the Governor
B. Prime Minister
C. Chief Justice of India
D. There is no exception


49. The authority competent to suspend the operation of “Fundamental Rights” guaranteed under the Constitution of India is:
A. Supreme Court
B. Parliament
C. Prime Minister
D. President of India


50. Fundamental Rights can be classified into:
A. 6 groups
B. 5 groups
C. 8 groups
D. 7 groups

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Friday, January 23, 2009

Indian History MCQs 1

1. The main occupation of Palaeolithic (Old stone) people was :
A. agriculture
B. animal husbandry
C. fishing
D. hunting


2. The Stone Age people had the first domestic:
A. asses
B. dogs
C. horses
D. sheep


3. Which among the following metals was first used by man?
A. Iron
B. Gold
C. Copper
D. Diamond


051 The first discourse of Buddha at Der Parkin Sarnath is called:
A. Mahabhiniskraman
B. Mahaparinirvana
C. Mahamastakabhisheka
D. Dharmachakra Pravartana


5. Which one of the following archaeologists initially discovered the Mohenjodaro site of the Indus Valley civilisation ?
A. Sir John Marshal
B. Rakhal Das Bannerjee
C. Daya Ram Sahni
D. Sir Martimer Wheeler


6. The relics of the pre-Aryan civilisation have been unearthed at:
A. Taxila
B. Rajgir
C. Indraprastha
D. Mohenjodaro


7. Which among the following throws light on Harappan Culture?
A. Archaeological finds
B. The Harapan script
C. The rock edicts
D. None of the above


8. Script of the Harappans:
A. describes their war against the indigenous inhabitants
B. has not yet been deciphered
C. is written in Prakrit language
D. None of the above is true


9. The cities of Kalibangan and Lothal are associated with :
A. Egyptian culture
B. Harappan culture
C. Aryan culture
D. Chinese civilisation


052 Gautama Buddha attained Parinirvana at:
A. Lumbini
B. Vaishali
C. Sarnath
D. Kushinagar


11. The excavations at which of the following sites provided the evidence of maritime trade being carried on during the period of the Harappan culture?
A. Mohenjodaro
B. Lothal
C. Kalibangan
D. Roper


12. The Harappans did not know the use of:
A. bronze
B. gold
C. iron
D. Silver


13. Harappan Culture was spread over:
A. Punjab, Sind, Bihar, Rajasthan, Gujarat
B. Sind, Punjab, Baluchistan, Afghanistan
C. Sind, Punjab, Jammu & Kashmir, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat
D. Jammu & Kashmir, Rajasthan, Afghanistan


14. The glory of the Harappan culture rests chiefly on:
A. architecture
B. town planing
C. craftsmanship
D. administrative system


15. The Harappan Civilisation is known for its:
A. agriculture
B. overseas trade and commerce
C. art and painting
D. drainage system


16. Indus Valley Civilisation is also known as the Harappan culture because:
A. the site of Harappa is six times larger than Mohenjodaro site
B. the Indus Valley Civilisation is considered the elementary/initial stage of the Vedic culture and Harappa is believed to be the same as Harappa mentioned in the Vedas
C. Harappa was the first site to be excavated in the Indus valley
D. the most important/significant evidence of the achievements of this civilisation have been excavated from Harappa


17. Of the following sites associated with theIndus Valley Civilisation, one located in India is:
A. Lothal
B. Mohenjodaro
C. Harappa
D. None of the above


18. With which period is Indus Valley Civilisation associated?
A. 567-487 BC
B. 327-325 BC
C. 300-200 BC
D. 250-150 BC


19. Which of the following is correct?
A. The Indus Valley Civilization existed even before the spread of Harappan Culture
B. The Indus Valley Civilization co-existed with the Aryan Civilisation
C. The Indus Valley people used materials made of iron
D. The Indus Valley Civilisation was an urban civilisation


20. The Indus Valley Civilisation people had the knowledge of:
A. gold, silver, copper, iron, bronze but not tin
B. gold, silver, copper, bronze, lead but not iron
C. gold, silver, copper, bronze, tin, iron but not lead
D. gold, silver, copper, tin, iron but not bronze


21. Which of the following is the most important feature of the Indus Valley Civilization?
A. Burnt brick buildings
B. Gold coins
C. Sound system of administration
D. Art & architecture


22. The Indus Valley people had trade relations with:
A. Egypt
B. Greece
C. Sumeria (Iraq)
D. Mesopotamia


23. Knowledge about the existence of which of the following animals is doubtful in the Indus Valley Civilisation?
A. Cat
B. Dog
C. Bull
D. Horse


24. The Indus Valley people were worshipers of:
A. Mother goddess
B. Indra and Varuna
C. Brahma
D. Vishnu


25. The script of Indus Valley Civilisation is:
A. Persian
B. Dravidian
C. Sanskrit
D. Undeciphered


26. The parent script of the Indo-Aryan andDravidian languages is:
A. Indus
B. Brahmi
C. Kharosti
D. Aramaic


27. The oldest among the Vedas is the:
A. Sama Veda
B. Atharva Veda
C. Rig Veda
D. Yajur Veda


28. The one that can be called a Buddhist scripture is the:
A. Vedas
B. Aranyakas
C. Upanishads
D. Tripitakas


29. The Rig Veda is a book on:
A. sacrificial prayers
B. praise of gods
C. mysticism and philosophy
D. political, social, and religious life of the people of vedic age


30. Which one of the following contains the Gayatri Mantra?
A. Rig Veda
B. Yajur Veda
C. Upanishad
D. Aranyakas


31. In the Rigveda one finds:
A. hymnsin praise of the gods
B. rituals to be practised by people
C. list of yagnas to be performed
D. all the above


32. The important divinities mentioned in the Rigveda are:
A. Indra, Aditi, Rudra
B. Agni, Siva, Vishnu
C. Prajapati, Varuna, Vishnu
D. Indra, Agni, Varuna


33. The Prose explanations of the Vedas were known as the:
A. Brahmanas
B. Samhitas
C. Aranyakas
D. Upanishads


34. The poetical portion of the Vedas is known as:
A. Brahmana
B. Samhita
C. Aranyaka
D. Upanishada


35. The Vedangas were _____ in number.
A. six
B. four
C. eight
D. ten


36. Which one of the following does not constitute part of the Veda?
A. Nirukta
B. Upanishad
C. Brahmana
D. Samhita


37. The Puranas are:
A. 4 in number
B. 7 in number
C. 10 in number
D. 18 in number


38. Which one of the following was worshipped as a heavenly god by ancient Indians?
A. Surya
B. Angaraka (Mangala)
C. Sukra
D. Sani


39. New schools of thought against Vedic ritualistic practices arose around:
A. 100 BC
B. 600BC
C. 5th century AD
D. 540BC


40. Mahavira was born in a Kshatriya clan of the name o :
A. Shakya
B. Jnatrika
C. Malas
D. Lichhavis


41. Name of Mahavira‘s wife was:
A. Gopa
B. Yashodhara
C. Jabala
D. Yashoda


42. Who, according to Jains, was the founder of Jainism?
A. Rishaba
B. Mahavira
C. Arishtanemi
D. Parsvanatha


43. Kaivalya is associated with:
A. Brahminism
B. Jainism
C. Buddhism
D. Zoroastrianism


44. The Angas constitute the sacred literature of the:
A. Buddhists
B. Parsis
C. Jains
D. Hindus


45. The Jains believe that Mahavira was the last of the:
A. teachers
B. monks
C. prophets
D. tirthankaras


46. Tirthankaras are associated with :
A. Sikhism
B. Christianity
C. Buddhism
D. Jainism


47. Lord Bahubali’s statue named Gomateswara statue is situated on the _____ which is part of a sacred city of the Jains.
A. Satpura mountains
B. Vindhyachal mountains
C. Eastern Ghats
D. Indragiri hills


48. Buddha was born at:
A. Pataliputra
B. Ujain
C. Rajgriha
D. Lumbini


49. Which State is called the Cradle of Budhism?
A. Sikkim
B. Bihar
C. UP
D. MP


50. Gautam Budha first preached his sermon at:
A. Lumbini
B. Prayag
C. Sarnath
D. Gaya

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Sunday, January 4, 2009

APEC 2008: A New Commitment to Asia Pacific Development

The twentieth annual summit of Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) was held in Lima, the capital of Peru on 22-23rd November, 2008. During the two-day series of political-economic meetings a comprehensive discussion was held by the leader and business dignitaries from the 21 APEC member economies. The theme of the discussion was growth, equity and sustainable development which are challenges for APEC. A new commitment to Asia Pacific Development was the theme of the APEC 2008. Focus was also on personal and economic development.


Highlights of APEC 2008

- Despite the global financial crisis, the leaders of the regional economies urged a call against protectionism.
- Free trade was backed.
- Peru reaffirmed its opposition to trade and investment barriers and continued supporting the multilateral trade system, including the World Trade Organisation and supported a conclusion to the Doha trade round.
- The summit supported the G20 declaration to the international economic meltdown.
- Promises were made on food output, graft and terrorism.
- Main focus was on the economic crisis.
- Importance was put on issues like economic integration, food security and climate change.
- Helping the poor to cope with the rising food prices.
- No raise in new trade and investment barriers for the next 12 months.

APEC Profile

Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is a forum for 21 Pacific Rim Countries or regions or member economies for the discussion of the regional economy, cooperation, trade and investment. The APEC Economic Leaders’ annual summit is conducted by the APEC organisation which is attended by the heads of government of all APEC members. However, the Republic of China is an exception which is represented under the name Chinese Taipei by a ministerial-level official.

In 1989 for more effective economic cooperation across the Pacific Rim region the then Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke demanded a meeting which led to the first meeting of APEC in the Australian capital Canberra in November, 1989.

APEC Members

1. Australia
2. Brunei
3. Canada
4. Chile
5. China
6. Hong Kong
7. Chinese Taipei
8. Indonesia
9. Japan
10. Malaysia
11. Mexico
12. New Zealand
13. Papua New Guinea
14. Peru
15. Philippines
16. Russia
17. Singapore
18. South Korea
19. Thailand
20. United States
21. Vietnam

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BIMSTEC: New Trade Horizon

Recently, the second summit for the BIMSTEC was held in New Delhi. Various leaders from the member countries participated in the summit and outlined the policies and various focus of the association. BIMSTEC agreed to enhance collaborative efforts to jointly face the current global financial crisis.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also participated and pitched to formulate a free trade agreement for goods and services trade between the BIMSTEC counties. The summit also gave BIMSTEC a more comprehensive and detailed role with a joint declaration by the leaders to cooperate in areas like agriculture, climate, technology, poverty, food security, transport, crime and terrorism, culture, tourism and energy.

The body also took note of the progress made so far on negotiations for goods in the BIMSTEC free trade area. The members of the BIMSTEC are negotiating and finalising the Free Trade Agreement between the countries on priority basis in the summit.
Other issues that were received attention in the summit included climate change, strengthening cooperation in poverty alleviation in the context of food security. A proposal to establish a BIMSTEC poverty alleviation centre in Bangladesh and a food security reserve among BISTEC members were also formulated. Another proposal was to set up a BIMSTEC technology transfer facility in Sri Lanka to help in the sharing of technologies targeted towards micro, small and medium scale enterprises in the region. In the field of technology, India announced 150 new scholarships to facilitate the sharing of technical know how in the region.

BIMSTEC Profile
Full Form: Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation
Members: India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Bhutan and Nepal
Economy Prospects: The total GDP of the area is 1.7 trillion dollars.
Evolution: BIMSTEC is regional body set up in 1997 whose main purpose is to serve as a link between South Asia and South East Asia for better trade, transport and overall development in the region. It was set up under the leadership of Indian in June 1997. Initially, a new sub-regional grouping was formed in Bangkok by Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, and Thailand Economic Cooperation. Later Myanmar, Nepal and Bhutan were also added in the group making it BIMSTEC in December 1997. During the first summit held on 31 July 2004, leaders of the group agreed that the name of the grouping should be known as BIMSTEC or the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation.

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Rupee Liquidity: RBI measures to improve situation

The global financial down turn that plagued the market worldwide has its repercussion on Indian economy too where the private sector are left in lurch with liquidity crunch, thus limiting the scope to develop or invest further. To help these aggrieved investors, RBI announced a number of policies in its mid term review in October and as a part of liquidity control policy in September and November. These can be broadly classified as monetary measures to ease the Rupee Liquidity and Foreign Exchange Liquidity.

The measures taken to improve the liquidity condition can be listed in the following points:
1. The Cash Reserve Ration (CRR) has been reduced by a cumulative 3.5 percentage points of net demand and time liabilities (NDTL) since October 11 2008. Accordingly, the CRR has been brought down from 9 per cent to 5.5 per cent of NDTL.
2. The Statutory Liquidity Ration (SLR) has been reduced by 1 percentage points, this is, from 25 per cent of NDTL to 24 per cent.
3. A term repo facility for an amount of Rs. 60,000 crore has been instituted under the liquidity adjustment facility to enable banks to ease liquidity stress faced by mutual funds (MFs) and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) with associalted SLR exemption of 1.5 per cent of NDTL.
4. The Reserve Bank provided an advance of Rs. 25,000 crore to financial institutions under the Agricultural Debt Waiver and Debt Relief Scheme, pending release of money by the Government.
5. The Reserve Bank has put in place a mechanism to buy back, dated securities issued under the Market Stabilisation Scheme (MSS) so as to provide another avenue for injecting liquidity of a more durable nature into the system.

Forex Liquidity
1. The Reserve Bank announced that it would continue to sell foreign exchange (US dollars) through agent banks to augment supply in the domestic foreign exchange market or intervene directly to meet any demand-supply gaps.
2. The Reserve Bank announced that it would institute special market operations to meet the foreign exchange requirements of public sector oil marketing companies against oil bonds when they become available.
3. External commercial borrowings (ECBs) up to 500 million US dollar per borrower per financial year were permitted for rupee expenditure and /or foreign currency expenditure for permissible end-uses under the automatic route.

Introduction to Economic Terms Involved

Liquidity
Liquidity is the availability of cash and other cash like marketable instruments that help in purchasing and investment. In economics the liquidity constitutes the money supplies that are held by the public.
Liquidity also refers both to that quality of a business which enables it to meet its payment obligations, in terms of possessing sufficient liquid assets; and to such assets themselves.

Liquid Assets

The liquid marketable assets constitutes currencies and notes with public and private sector, cheques, credit cards, demand drafts issued from savings and current accounts, bentures, bonds, deposits and other secondary market investment are slow considered as constituents of liquidity. Swaps, future options and other stock market derivatives are also considered as liquidity enhancing factors in the economy.

Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR)

Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) is the ratio of cash reserves that the banks have to maintain with RBI.

Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR)

Apart from CRR, banks have to maintain minimum liquid asset in the form of cash, gold and approved securities, mostly government securities. This ratio is known as Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR).

Net Demand and Time Liabilities (NDTL)

The customers and the private sectors and other units put their savings with banks in the form of deposits which may be in the savings account or current account. These savings may be put in the form of time deposits or may be just put in savings. Thus the money supply in this form is re-used by the banks in issuing demand drafts and other forms of monetary obligations thus increasing the money supply in the economy.

Non Bank Financial Companies (NBFCs)

Non Bank Financial Companies are financial institutions that provide banking services without meeting the legal definition of a bank, i.e. one that does not hold a banking license. Operations are, regardless of this, still exercised under bank regulation. The institutions like LIC, GIC, EPF, UTI, post offices, developmental financial institutions are some of the examples of NBFC operative in India.

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Shourya Defence Missile launched successfully

Indian successfully test fired “Shourya”, a medium-range surface to surface ballistic missile, to be used by the Army. The sophisticated tactical missile is capable of carrying conventional warheads with a payload of about one tonne. With longer shelf-life, as it is stored in a canister just like the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, the Shourya is easily transportable and user friendly.

A two stage missile is a product of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). It is the land version of the underwater-launched missile called K-15 (Sagarika), which was fired in February 2008 from an underwater pontoon. The missile is having nuclear capabilities which could carry a payload of one tonne.

Sagarika
Sagarika is a nuclear-capable submarine-launched ballistic missile with a range of 750 kilometres (466 mi). Sagarika has a length of 18.5 metres (61 ft), weighs 17 tonnes (17 LT/19 ST) and carry a payload of up to 500 kilograms (1,102 lb). Sagarika was developed at the DRDO’s missile complex in Hyderabad.

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Intel introduces Intel Core i7 processor

Intel Corp. has introduced its most advanced desktop processor ever, the Intel Core i7 processor. The core i7 processor is the first member of a new family of Nehalem processor designs and is the most sophisticated ever built with new technologies that boost performance on demand and maximise data throughput.

The Core i7 processor speeds video editing, immersive games and other popular internet and computer activities by up to 40 percent without increasing power consumption.

Each Core i7 processor features an 8 MB level 3 cache and 3 channels of DDR3 1006 memory to deliver the best memory performance of any desktop platform. Intel’s top performance processor, the Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition, also removes over-speed protection allowing Intel’ knowledgeable customers or hobbyists to further increase the chip speed.

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India to be most populous: UN Report

In a report released by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), India is projected to be the most populous country by 2050, overtaking China. The theme of the report is “Reaching Common Ground: Culture, Gender and Human Rights”.

Indian in Comparison
The “State of World Population Report, 2008”, released in New Delhi by Planning Commission member Syeda Hameed, says the world population will increase from 674.9 crore to 919.1 crore by 2050. Following points could be deduced from the report:
1. Indian population, now 118.6 crore, is projected to be 165.8 crore in 2050 as against 140.8 crore projected for China.
2. India’s population growth rate is projected at 1.5 per cent during 2005-10 compared to 0.6 per cent for China.
3. India’s current fertility rate is 2.78 compared to 1.73 in China.
4. Pakistan’s population of 16.7 crore will become 29.2 crore in 2050.
5. Sri Lanka would witness a negative growth, from 1.94 crore to 1.87 crore.

Demographics of India

India occupies 2.4 % of world’s land area and supports over 17.5 % of the world’s population. Indaa has more arable land area than any country except the United States, and more water area than any country except Canada and the United States. India’s population of approximately 1,147,996 million as estimated in July 2008, (1,028.7 million as per 2001 Census) comprises approximately one-sixth of the world’s population. According to estimates of 2007, Indian population growth rate is 1.38 %, Birth rate is 22.69 births/1,000 population and Death rate is 6.58 deaths/1,000 population.

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World Development Report: Reshaping Economic Geography

World Bank recently released the World Development Report- 2009: Reshaping Economic Geography. According to the report, the most effective policies for promoting long-term growth are those that facilitate geographic concentration and economic integration, both within and across countries, especially in Africa.

World Development Report
The World Development Report is produced on an annual basis and is the World Bank’s major analytical publication. The World Development Report is a guide to the economic, social and environmental state of the world today. Each year it focuses on a particular aspect of development selected by the Bank’s president. Each World Development Report team is led by a senior bank member who is supported by a team of staff and consultants, under the guidance of the Chief Economist. The topics covered in the past reports are like agriculture, youth, transition economics, labour, infrastructure, health, the environment and poverty. The reports are the Bank’s best-known contribution about development.

Reports consider the social, economic and environmental state of the world. This year the report mentions about facilitating geographic concentration and economic integration. According to the report, the instruments of integration are common institutions, connective infrastructures and targeted interventions. Common institutions imply regulations affecting land, labour and commerce, and social services such as education and health finaced through taxes and transfer. Infrastructure refers to roads, railways, ports, airports and communication system. The targeted interventions include slum clearance programmes, special tax incentives to firms, and preferential trade access for poor countries.

Reshaping Economic Geography

The new report challenges the assumption that economic activities must be spread geographically to benefit the world’s most poor and vulnerable. Trying to spread out economic activity can hinder growth and does little to fight poverty. For rapid, shared growth, governments must promote economic integration which at its core, is about the mobility of people, products and ideas. Mobility has helped people escape the tyranny of poor geography or poor governance. The report sees mobility as part of a vital process of economic integration, since mobile people and products form the cornerstone of inclusive, sustainable globalisation. Integration should be considered as an important concept in the policy discussion involving the location of production, people and poverty, with respect to urbanisation, regional development and globalisation. Balanced regional growth that economic planners aim to achieve has proved elusive. Despite well-intended Policies to disperse economic growth across geographic areas inequalities persist. According to the report, the new approach is change in policy with the focus on “economic integration”. Rather than carry the burden of creating economic growth spatially, the report suggests integration at three geographic live-local, national and international. This is not only changing the role of government but also providing location-based incentives to attract industry to economically backward regions.

Geography is important in deciding what is needed, what is unnecessary. With this developing countries can reshape their economic geography. The report concludes that, their growth will still be unbalanced, but their development will be inclusive. The report draws on ideas that have become mainstreamed in economics over the last generation, including those by this year’s Nobel Prise winner, Paul Krugman’s concept of ‘economics of scale’. The report, published in November, 2008, argues that some places are doing well because they have promoted transformations along the three dimensions of economic geography.

Distance- Migrating to reduce distance to economic opportunity
Countries do not prosper without mobile people. The people’s mobility is the best gauge of their economic potential, and their willingness to migrate to reduce their distance to economic density a good measure of their desire for advancement.

Density- Drawing people into cities

Getting density right requires harnessing market forces to encourage concentration and promote convergence in living standards between villages, towns and cities. According to the report, it is the most important dimension for development at the local scale.

Division- Thinning economic border to access regional and global markets

As countries thin their economic borders to enter world markets to take advantage of specialisation and scale. Border restrictions to flow of goods, capital, ideas and people continue to prevent progress in Africa in contrast with Western Europe.
The report makes it clear that the role of government remains important not spread out economic activity but to encourage mobility towards it, and to ensure universal access to basic services such as health and education. The most important thing is to connect people who are left behind to opportunities in places that are prospering. Policymakers should distinguish between the geography of social welfare and the geography of economic production. Sometimes, place-based programmes in poor places are necessary.

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Saturday, January 3, 2009

Slovakia becomes 16th member of European Union to adopt "Euro"


Slovakia has become the 16th member of Eurozone (European Union member states that have adopted the euro as their sole official currency) by adopting Euro as their currency replacing Koruna.
In 1998 eleven EU member-states had met the convergence criteria, and the Eurozone came into existence with the official launch of the Euro on 1 January 1999. The first eleven states to adopt Euro initially on 1 January 1999 were: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal.

Greece qualified in 2000 and was admitted on 1 January 2001.

Physical coins and banknotes were introduced on 1 January 2002.

Slovenia qualified in 2006 and was admitted on 1 January 2007.

Cyprus and Malta joined on 1 January 2008.

Slovakia qualified in 2008 and joined on 1 January 2009.

At the moment there are 16 member states with over 325 million people in the Eurozone.

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