World
Harris Brings New Energy, Doubles Down on Abortion Rights
World
India's Modi sets aside billions for jobs, allies in post-election budget
India’s government assigned billions of dollars for job creation and regions run by key coalition partners in a budget aimed at cementing the coalition and winning back voters after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s election setback.
Tax changes unveiled in the budget included a higher levy on equity investments to allay concerns the market might be overheating and lower taxes for foreign companies to attract more investment.
INDIAN PM MODI VISITS RUSSIA VISIT FOR FIRST TIME SINCE START OF UKRAINE WAR
The $576 billion in total outlays included $32 billion for rural programs, $24 billion to be spent over five years to create jobs, and more than $5 billion for two states ruled by coalition partners.
“In this budget, we particularly focus on employment, skilling, small businesses, and the middle class,” Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Tuesday.
The government will also implement reforms across factors of production, including land and labor, she said.
Subsequent budgets would continue to focus on those areas, Sitharaman said while presenting her seventh annual budget.
Despite the new spending, India cut its fiscal deficit target to 4.9% of gross domestic product in fiscal year ending on March 31, 2025, from 5.1% in February’s interim budget, helped by a large surplus of $25 billion from the central bank.
The government also marginally reduced gross market borrowing to 14.01 trillion rupees.
Economist had blamed the distress in rural areas and a weak job market for a poor poll showing that cost Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) its absolute majority. They say land and labor reforms are essential for India to sustain strong economic growth.
Asia’s third-largest economy grew 8.2% in the past fiscal year and the government sees growth of 6.5% to 7% this fiscal year, a report showed on Monday.
Sakshi Gupta, principal economist at HDFC Bank, said the budget managed to strike a balance between policies supporting growth and maintaining fiscal discpline.However, implementing more ambitious reforms, will be “challenging” for the coalition, Gene Fang, associate managing director for sovereign risk at Moody’s Ratings, told Reuters.
Previous attempts to make it easier for companies to acquire land and lay off staff have repeatedly faced pushback from states concerned about protests such measures might provoke.
Among measures aimed at boosting employment, the budget included incentives for companies to train staff as well as and cheaper loans for higher education, Sitharaman said.
India’s reported urban unemployment rate is 6.7%, but private agency the Centre For Monitoring Indian Economy pegs it higher, at 8.4%.
The budget also maintains spending on long-term infrastructure projects at 11.11 trillion rupees, with states assigned 1.5 trillion rupees in long-term loans to fund such expenditure. Some will be linked to reform milestones in areas such as land and labor, which Sitharaman said the government intended to push in its third term.
In a concession to the government’s allies, Sitharaman said it would hasten loans from multilateral agencies for the eastern state of Bihar and the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.
TAX CHANGES
India raised to 20% from 15% its tax rate for equity investments held for less than a year, while the rate for those held longer than 12 months rose to 12.5% from 10%. The taxes will be applicable from Wednesday.
The government also increased the tax on equity derivative transactions that have drawn retail investors, which will be implemented from Oct. 1.
Shares and the rupee declined after the budget announcement but recovered most of the losses with main stock indexes .NSEI, .BSESN ending the day down about 0.13%.
The tax changes were a short-term negative for the market, but could pay off in the longer term, said Vineet Arora, investment manager at Singapore-based NAV Capital Emerging Star Fund.
“It is expected to help in stabilizing the market and attracting investors with a long-term perspective on the Indian economy,” Arora said.
Corporate tax for foreign companies was cut to 35% from 40%, with the aim of encouraging more investment, while a lower tax burden for lower income consumers, expected to encourage spending, helped drive consumer stocks to record highs.
World
Two dead and 13 injured as walkway collapses in Naples
800 residents were evacuated from the apartment block in Le Vele di Scampia, which was a setting for the TV series ‘Gomorrah’.
A pedestrian walkway in a housing project collapsed in the southern Italian city of Naples, killing two and injuring dozens.
The collapse, which occurred shortly after 10.30 pm on Monday, killed a 29-year-old male and a 36-year-old woman as well as injuring several children.
800 residents were evacuated from the remaining block after the collapse.
Local governor Nicola Nardella described it as, “a very hard night”.
The victims are Roberto Abbruzzo, 29, who died on impact, and Margherita Della Ragione, 35, who died on arrival at the hospital. The two were related.
Seven injured children, aged between two and eight, are currently being treated at the Santobono Hospital in Naples with two in serious condition.
Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed sorrow after the incident, posting on X, “My condolences go out to the families of the victims, together with thoughts of closeness to the injured and their loved ones”.
Roberta Metsola, recently re-elected president of the European Parliament, said that the accident was a “tragedy”.
The city’s mayor Gaetano Manfredi has called for an investigation to be made into the incident.
The housing estate, which was known as Le Vele di Scampia, is known for its poverty and as a site for mafia warfare.
The site was the fictional setting for a hit series in 2008 titled Gomorrah premised on a book about the Camorra mafia by author Roberto Saviano.
Last April, authorities announced a €18 million regeneration project for the area in order to shake off its reputation for crime.
The project includes the improvement of common areas, the garage floor and arcades, and the renovation of roofs.
World
Tracking Typhoon Gaemi
Gaemi was a typhoon in the Philippine Sea early Wednesday Taiwan time, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center said in its latest advisory.
The typhoon had sustained wind speeds of 109 miles per hour, which would make it a Category 2 hurricane if it were in the Atlantic Ocean.
Typhoon season is year-round; however, most typhoons form from early July through mid-December.
Most typhoons scrape or strike places like the Philippines, Japan and Taiwan; they can also hit the Korean Peninsula, China and Vietnam, bringing damaging winds and storm surges.
Typhoons have also hit U.S. territories, causing billions of dollars in devastating damage to places like Guam, which was battered by Super Typhoon Mawar in May last year.
-
Politics1 week ago
Two key states to see massive GOP voter registration operation
-
News1 week ago
Shooting at a Trump Rally in Pennsylvania: Maps and Photos
-
World6 days ago
One dead after car crashes into restaurant in Paris
-
News5 days ago
Video: Young Republicans on Why Their Party Isn’t Reaching Gen Z (And What They Can Do About It)
-
News7 days ago
In Milwaukee, Black Voters Struggle to Find a Home With Either Party
-
News1 week ago
Video: Biden Asks America to ‘Lower the Temperature’
-
World1 week ago
Ukraine: shelling in Kherson leaves at least two people dead
-
World4 days ago
Freshers' week in Strasbourg for new EU lawmakers