Popular Articles

generic levitra
IT parks again on Madhya Pradesh government agenda
After frustrating traditional bid attempts for its SEZ-categorised IT parks in Indore, Bhopal, Gwalior and Jabalpur, the Madhya Pradesh government is likely to re-bid for the parks through Swiss Challenge System, under which the government can also take offers from private parties, unsolicited. It is also likely to change the model of sale of IT parks so that the developers can attract private partners. Crystal IT park in Indore, a complete infrastructure of eight-storied building, has no taker for years, and the Bhopal IT park is reportedly going the same way before it can see the light of day. Few months back Zoom Developers pulled out of the Crystal IT park project after successfully bidding for it.

payday loans canada
MSME ministry to fund innovative entrepreneurship ideas
The Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) has commenced a programme to promote the transformation of novel entrepreneurship ideas into business ventures by funding the projects.

News of the day

Orders and deliveries for Boeing dip in Aug
Commercial plane maker Boeing saw orders for its jets dip 11 per cent in August this year from a year ago while for the first eight months of 2009, orders plunged 71 per cent to 161 from 556 in January-August 2008.
Corporate

DIPP to review FDI in cigarette industry on Jul 10

The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) under the Ministry of Commerce has called a meeting on July 10 to discuss the foreign direct investment (FDI) policy in the cigarette industry. - 100% assurance for special segments - Retail players welcome Survey recommendation on FDI - FDI into India rose 46% in 2008 to $46.5 bn: UNCTAD study - FDI in multi-brand retail: Survey - Exports down by 29.2%; imports 39.2% in May - Big TV, Carlyle in talks to raise $50-100 mn The meeting will be attended by officials from the Department of Economic Affairs, the health ministry and the Planning Commission. Under the current policy, FDI up to 100 per cent is allowed in this sector provided no licence is issued to manufacture cigarettes. The policy has come under attack from various quarters, especially from the health ministry, which has sought a total ban on FDI in the industry. The health ministry has moved a draft note for the Cabinet on this. The move comes at a time when Japan Tobacco International’s (JTIL’s) proposal to raise its stake in its Indian venture from 50 per cent to 74 per cent has been pending before the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for months. The proposal is considered a test case given that no application on tobacco has been cleared by the FIPB since 1998 due to strong opposition from the domestic tobacco lobby as well as sections of the government. Domestic tobacco companies are opposed to entry of new players or increase in stakes by the incumbent foreign companies. There has been hectic lobbying on the issue by both domestic and international majors. Dominique Dreyer, Swiss ambassador to India, is said to have written to the DIPP a few months ago to argue for a proposed increase in investments by a Swiss affiliate of US tobacco major Philip Morris International in Godfrey Philips. Philip Morris has 35.93 per cent stake in Godfrey Philips, in which KK Modi is the Indian partner. The issue has been pending for years. Sources said the Swiss ambassador said in his letter that the Indian government should consult all stakeholders before any substantial change in investment and trade rules applicable to tobacco products. The ambassador’s letter reiterated that the Indian government’s policies effectively limited manufacturing capacity in tobacco and so new or additional FDI would not increase India’s cigarette manufacturing capacity. Phillip Morris International Chairman and CEO Louis C Camilleri had also written the former commerce minister Kamal Nath saying protectionism was an ineffective tool to address public health objectives and would only entrench the few existing participants to the detriment of others. Camilleri argued that the health effects of tobacco should be addressed through regulations applied to domestic as well as imported products as well as to all manufacturers.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):