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Queer Global Moves. India on razor's edge.
It is a queer world. Politics and economics are contesting each other almost globally. In the country, Parliament remains paralyzed this week. India engages with the Taliban in training them on finances. Supreme Court expresses concerns over Governors’ role in state politics. Export and import targets contract amid global headwinds. Market turmoil puts the rupee to slide to Rs 82.61.
Additionally, Reliance Oil shifting its oil trading center to Dubai may be opening up a conduit for its product processed of cheaper imported crude even as international oil prices, Brent crude, slump to $75 a barrel. Inflation in India continues to rage over the Reserve Bank of India's tolerance limit of 6.4 percent. And Rajya Sabha is told that metro rail companies in all eight cities, including Delhi, Kochi, Maharashtra, and Noida are in losses.
Stocks plunge all over amid the banking crisis leading Indian
stocks to touch a five-month low. And India makes waves as it wins two Oscar
awards, one for a song, Naatu Naatu, and the other for a documentary the
Elephant Whisperers.
Global bank collapses lead to speculation of a rate cut. In
a routine manner, banks are collapsing triggered by the SVB. Three regional US
banks Silver Gate, and Silicon Valley went down the count. A fourth, First Republic,
explores possible sales. The Swiss Bank, Credit Suisse, woes spook volatile European
market.
The US-Europe-NATO engagement with drone attacks on Russia
increases even as Ukraine continues to be battered. Economic and political
tension mounts the world over amid Chinese support to Russia.
Parliament's paralysis during the peak budget session has
raised many questions. Has Rahul Gandhi become so significant that the BJP
should take it to this high pitch whether he speaks here or at Cambridge? Parliament
is for parleys even if one speaks anything unsavory, they can depend on the
short public memory amid too many high dramas.
On the reverse, is the ruling party promoting the Opposition,
a new in Indian dynamics? Not less interesting is politics amid economic challenges
in neighboring Pakistan. Security forces sent to arrest its former Prime Minister
Imran Khan, after a march against the government, were beaten back by his
supporters. As political drama reaches a pitch, Khan now playing the role of a
political insurgent is milking the maximum. Pakistanis question whether it is the Sharif government's way to divert attention from the economic crisis as forex
reserves fall to $2.9 billion and its bid to have $1.1 billion with IMF drags
on.
The G20 chain of events has drawn world attention. India is
showcasing itself for exhibiting its march to a $3 to 5 trillion economy.
Consensus language on Ukraine has fallen away at G20. India is focusing on to
de-hyphenate its relations with Russia from China’s belligerent support. The
joint declaration after the foreign ministers’ meeting could not be signed. India is
aiming at balancing. But the West, Russia, and China conflict is leading the next
level of their struggle to the global South, suffering from severe financial
and humanitarian woes. India is harping on Africa and the deprived nation. Maybe if India succeeds it can take the leadership of many erstwhile non-aligned
nations.
The deep concern is evident from India engaging with the
Taliban through a workshop at the Indian Institute of Management, Kozhikode as
India Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme (ITEC) on its culture,
legislation, and business climate. Reservations apart, from strategically located
Afghanistan, cannot be ignored for India’s security and stability. Such
programs are virtually a continuation of its pre-Taliban Afghanistan when it
was having a series of such programs. The present outreach may be a part of the
overall Indian engagement in G20, West-Russia-Ukraine developments. It is a long-term approach in the overall gamut.
Coincidentally, the US has selected its ambassador to India,
Eric Garcetti, after 20 months. But the US may say it has nothing to link up
with other events. President Joe Biden’s White House has not appointed envoys
in 40 countries, including Saudi Arabia, during the last two years, and one
year of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The war is intensifying!
Maybe. The
Pentagon releases a video of
Russian planes harassing and eventually damaging a US military drone that crashed
into the Black Sea. Simultaneously,
Poland announces sending MiG 29 also to Ukraine at this juncture. Poland is sending four vintage Soviet-era
fighters. Slovakia on Wednesday announced to dispatch of MiGs. More countries may send aircraft to Ukraine.
The geographical gap between Ukraine and Taiwan is becoming
geopolitically blurred. China’s 12-point peace proposal for Ukraine was heavily
slanted. It seemed more at pleasing Russia and the Chinese takeover of Taiwan. The
G 20 has yet to find a solution. Its escalation would impinge on India as
closer home the international arms engagement increases. India itself is
emerging as the biggest arms purchaser, a strategic necessity, impacting its
development as financing becomes expensive with a high debt of over $172 billion.
An unstable Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and Nepal add to its burden.
But debt seems to run the world. Banks in the US borrowed heavily, says Bloomberg, over the
last week from two federal facilities. Data published by the US central
bank showed $152.85 billion in borrowing from the discount window—the
traditional liquidity backstop for banks—in the week ended March 15. It was a
record high and a staggering increase from the $4.58 billion borrowed the
previous week. It was $111 billion during the 2008 Lehman burst.
Credit Suisse survives with $54 billion credit from the
Swiss National Bank. The Swiss government is mulling and breaking up the bank to take over. How long the world can subsist on debt and not properly manage the
private sector that virtually now for decades has been living on subsisting
itself with people’s bank deposits everywhere from the US to India.
Interestingly and apparently, only the banks in Russia are
not hit. Is the western model of the private economy failing? Wherever that model
has been adopted siphoning of funds has been routine. No country is an
exception. It triggers a new move regarding whether banking itself should remain in the private
domain or not.
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