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Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Migration, Demographic Change, and Persecution of Hindus and Other Minorities in Pakistan and Bangladesh (1950–2026)

 

Demographic Change in Pakistan

Pakistan (Present-Day Pakistan)

According to the 1941 Census, Hindus constituted roughly 14–15% of the population in territories that today form Pakistan, while Sikhs accounted for another 6%. The Partition of 1947 triggered one of the largest forced migrations in human history. About 4.7 to 5 million Hindus and Sikhs migrated from West Pakistan to India between 1947 and 1951.

Hindu Population in Pakistan

Year

Hindu Population %

1941

~14.8%

1951

~1.6%

1998

~1.85%

Current Estimates

2–3%

The dramatic decline occurred mainly during and immediately after Partition, when most Hindus and Sikhs fled or were expelled from what became Pakistan.


Demographic Change in East Pakistan / BangladeshThe situation in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) followed a different trajectory.

Hindu Population in East Pakistan / Bangladesh

Year

Hindu Share

1947

~28–31%

1951

~22–30%

1961

~19%

1974

~14%

Today

~7.9–8.5%

Researchers generally agree that the Hindu percentage declined continuously after Partition.


Major Waves of Migration into India

1. Partition Migration (1947–1951)

From West Pakistan

  • Hindus and Sikhs migrating to India:
    • Approximately 4.7–5 million
  • Major origin areas:
    • Punjab
    • Sindh
    • North-West Frontier Province
    • Balochistan

Destination areas included:

  • Delhi
  • Punjab
  • Haryana
  • Rajasthan
  • Gujarat
  • Maharashtra

This remains the largest migration wave.

2. East Pakistan Migration (1950–1965)

Following:

  • Anti-Hindu riots
  • Property confiscation laws
  • Political discrimination

large numbers of Bengali Hindus migrated to:

  • West Bengal
  • Assam
  • Tripura
  • Meghalaya

Estimates vary, but several million migrated during this period.

3. 1964–1971 Migration

A major scholarly estimate by Bangladeshi economist Dr. Abul Barkat concluded that:

11.3 million Hindus left Bangladesh between 1964 and 2013 due to religious discrimination and insecurity.

This estimate is frequently cited in discussions of long-term minority outmigration.

4. Bangladesh Liberation War Migration (1971)

The largest post-Partition refugee flow occurred during the Bangladesh Liberation War.

By November 1971:

  • About 10 million refugees fled into India.
  • Most studies indicate that a majority of these refugees were Hindus.

Refugees entered:

  • West Bengal
  • Tripura
  • Assam
  • Meghalaya
  • Bihar

Many returned after Bangladesh became independent, but several million remained permanently in India.

5. Post-Independence Bangladesh Migration (1972–2026)

Migration continued because of:

  • Land seizures
  • Communal violence
  • Religious discrimination
  • Economic considerations

Most migrants settled in:

  • West Bengal
  • Assam
  • Tripura
  • Delhi
  • Maharashtra
  • Gujarat

The cumulative total of migrants from Bangladesh to India since 1947 is generally estimated in the tens of millions, although precise religious breakdowns remain disputed.

How Many Hindus Were Killed?

Partition Violence (1947–48)

Scholars estimate total deaths during Partition between:

  • 200,000 and 2 million

Victims included:

  • Hindus
  • Sikhs

East Pakistan Violence (1950)

Large-scale anti-Hindu violence occurred in:

  • Dhaka
  • Barisal
  • Khulna

Thousands were killed and many more displaced.

1964 Riots

Following unrest across East Pakistan:

  • Thousands of Hindus fled to India.
  • Casualty estimates vary widely.

The 1971 Bangladesh Genocide

This remains the most important episode affecting the Hindu population.

The Pakistani Army launched military operations on 25 March 1971 against Bengali nationalists and civilians.

Multiple contemporary diplomatic records and later investigations indicate that Hindus were specifically targeted.

Death Estimates

Different estimates exist:

Source

Estimated Deaths

Bangladesh Government

~3 million

Some Western scholars

300,000–500,000

Other studies

1–3 million

Were Most Victims Hindus?

Evidence shows Hindus were disproportionately targeted.

American diplomat Archer Blood reported systematic targeting of Hindus. U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy also documented selective violence against Hindu communities.


  • Hindus were a primary target.
  • A very large proportion of the victims were Hindus.

Forced Conversions

Pakistan

Human-rights organizations have documented:

  • Forced conversion of Hindu girls
  • Forced conversion of Sikh girls
  • Forced marriages

The problem is concentrated particularly in:

  • Sindh Province
  • Southern Punjab

Reliable cumulative figures since 1950 do not exist.

Bangladesh

There is evidence of:

  • Religious intimidation
  • Land grabbing
  • Occasional forced conversions

However, migration appears to have been a much larger demographic factor than conversion.

Christians, Buddhists and Sikhs

Pakistan

Sikhs

Most Sikhs left during Partition.

Estimated migration:

  • Approximately 1.5–2 million Sikhs moved to India between 1947 and 1951.

Broad Research-Based Conclusions

Pakistan

  • Nearly all Hindus and Sikhs of West Pakistan migrated during Partition.
  • Approximately 5–7 million Hindus and Sikhs moved to India between 1947 and 1951.

Bangladesh / East Pakistan

  • Hindu share declined from roughly 28–31% at Partition to around 8% today.
  • One major academic estimate suggests 11.3 million Hindus left Bangladesh between 1964 and 2013.
  • About 10 million refugees entered India during the 1971 war, the majority believed to be Hindus.

Killings

  • The 1971 Bangladesh genocide caused between 300,000 and 3 million deaths depending on the source consulted.
  • Hindus were a specifically targeted community, though victims also included many Bengali MuslimsAWAMI SUPPORTERS

Total Migration to India Since 1947

A reasonable synthesis of available scholarship suggests that:

  • 5–7 million Hindus and Sikhs migrated from West Pakistan during Partition.
  • More than 10–15 million Hindus are estimated to have migrated from East Pakistan/Bangladesh over the decades following Partition.
  • Additional smaller numbers of Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Parsis, and Hindus migrated from Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Bangladesh in later decades.

Thus, the cumulative migration of persecuted or vulnerable non-Muslim minorities from Pakistan, East Pakistan/Bangladesh, and Afghanistan into India since 1947 is commonly estimated to exceed 15–20 million people, .

This remains one of the largest and longest-running minority migration movements in South Asia since Partition.

Economic Power Needs a Weaker Currency

 


Rising industrial powers have repeatedly treated currency competitiveness as a growth tool. From the United States’ push to weaken the dollar under the Plaza Accord, to China’s decades-long resistance to letting the renminbi appreciate under U.S. pressure, the pattern is consistent: when manufacturing wants to scale, exchange-rate policy becomes strategic. India’s central bank, however, has largely done the reverse.

The Plaza Moment: Currency, Not Industry

In September 1985, Noboru Takeshita—Japan’s finance minister—left Tokyo under cover of a private golf outing, then flew to New York. The secrecy mattered because Japan had spent the prior decade deliberately keeping the yen weak, building trade surpluses against the United States, and resisting American demands for currency appreciation.

That resistance ended with the Plaza Hotel meeting—secretive, urgent, and decisive.

A Secret Agreement to Weaken the Dollar

That evening, Takeshita joined U.S., West German, French, and British finance ministers at the Plaza, summoned by Treasury Secretary James Baker. The meeting was not about Detroit’s competitiveness alone. It was about fixing the exchange rate as the instrument of adjustment.

When discussions ended, the U.S. had persuaded allies to help weaken the dollar, and Japan agreed to let the yen rise. Over the next two years, the dollar fell sharply—from roughly 240 yen to around 150—and then dropped below 130 soon after. Detroit gained breathing room it could not have earned on policy alone.

The Trade-Off Japan Accepted

Japan’s acceptance came with consequences. The yen’s rise helped fuel an asset bubble, later contributing to a banking crisis and decades of slower growth. Still, Plaza represented strategic clarity for the country that chose to bargain.

For the country that arrived quietly and negotiated in private, the cost was also political: being a creditor in an American century.

China Took the Opposite Path

China watched Japan’s agreement and moved differently. Through WTO complaints, Treasury reports, and pressure from multiple U.S. administrations, Beijing was accused of currency manipulation. Yet the renminbi stayed constrained.

Beijing’s logic was clear: if the exchange rate rose faster than China’s industrial strategy required, Chinese manufacturing would be priced out of global markets before reaching scale. So the renminbi remained relatively cheap—and exports accumulated.

Weak Currencies, Strong Strategies

These were not “weak” countries seeking comfort from weak money. They were serious economies using policy choices aligned with the stage of development. Growth needs direction, not just stability.

Why Competitive Currencies Matter

The logic is straightforward. A developing economy does not become rich by buying the world’s output at a prestigious exchange rate. It becomes rich by selling more of its own output to the world.

A competitive currency:

  • lowers the foreign-currency price of exports,
  • raises the domestic payoff from export production,
  • draws investment into tradable sectors, and
  • shifts scarce foreign exchange away from luxury consumption and toward productive capacity.

If industry is ready, depreciation is not merely a number changing on a screen—it changes the structure of growth.

India’s Timing: Capacity Built Under a Defended Rupee

India, by contrast, has resisted that adjustment. From 2022 through 2024, the Reserve Bank of India delivered unusually low rupee volatility, holding the currency comparatively steady against the dollar while other emerging markets adjusted. The rupee was defended as a matter of “honour” rather than deployed as an instrument.

This occurred during the period when production-linked incentive (PLI) schemes were building real capacity. Mobile phone imports reportedly fell sharply from FY21, and India scaled into becoming one of the world’s largest smartphone producers. The country was also ramping up industrial capability across multiple PLI sectors—factories that did not exist years earlier are shipping today.

Exchange Rate Meets the Export Chain

That matters because exchange rates decide whether a country captures global market share or hands it back to competitors. Capacity sits at the exact point in the export chain where currency competitiveness becomes pivotal.

But while PLI was building export capability through fiscal incentives, the central bank spent reserves to keep the rupee from doing the work that those incentives were meant to unlock. The two policy arms pulled against each other.

Paying the Fiscal Bill Twice

India has already paid the fiscal cost of building capacity through PLI. Refusing to let the exchange rate work now forces the country to pay twice:

  1. through PLI outlays to build capacity, and
  2. through reserve spending to prevent the currency from helping monetize it.

Even so, the rupee has since moved lower—past the mid-to-high 90s per dollar. Reserves have declined sharply, and market pressure has increased: foreign portfolio investors have reportedly withdrawn substantial amounts from Indian equities, while net FDI has been thin around turning points. Additional measures—including higher gold duties—and public requests to reduce gold purchases and certain spending reflect the severity of the moment.

The Real Lesson from Japan

If commentators were correct that the “psychology” of the exchange rate is the main issue, Japan would still be a cautionary tale for the wrong reason. The yen trades above 150 to the dollar today, yet Japan is not a failed state. It remains a developed economy with deep manufacturing and long-built net foreign assets. The productive base speaks louder than the exchange board.

The Problem Isn’t the Weaker Rupee—It’s the Delay

The real issue is not that India has a weaker rupee. The issue is that India spent decades without building enough export structure to make currency weakness manageable—or useful.

Once capacity began to come online, a different exchange-rate policy should have been in place long before this crisis demanded action.

The Creditor Path Is a Sequence, Not a Shortcut

Geoffrey Crowther described a pattern visible across major economies: countries begin as debtors, build manufacturing exports, generate trade surpluses, and only later graduate to creditor status. Britain, America, Japan, Korea, and China followed that road in order.

Currency strength typically arrives at the end of the journey, not at the beginning. India is trying to skip the line: demanding the prestige of a firm currency while manufacturing sits at relatively low levels and the import bill remains heavy.

The Ghost of 1991 Still Runs the Policy

India’s rupee politics still reflects trauma from 1991. In May and July of that year, emergency financing required gold to be moved as collateral—reportedly including shipments of 67 tonnes—while reserves fell to extremely limited coverage. The rupee was devalued quickly, and India entered an IMF structural adjustment programme.

That episode entered national memory as humiliation. Since then, many decisions by the RBI have operated under the shadow of that fear.

What the Trauma Narrative Misses

The deeper question is what devaluation actually enabled. During the 1990s and 2000s—when the rupee was weak and stayed competitive—India’s services sector found its global moment. The wage arbitrage that underpins hundreds of billions in services exports today depended on a competitive exchange rate.

Services also required fewer of the inputs that manufacturing needs. Manufacturing demands ports, reliable power, supplier ecosystems, land logistics, and labour flexibility. Today, those constraints are less binding than before due to PLI, infrastructure spending, and geopolitical realignment like China+1.

What built services was a competitive currency meeting prepared capacity. That condition now increasingly holds for manufacturing too.

A Tool, Not a Shame: Competitive Depreciation as Policy

A currency that weakens in a crisis is a symptom of failure. A currency managed competitively during development is an instrument. China, Japan, and the United States understood that distinction when it mattered. They were not ashamed of competitive currencies; they engineered them.

The Policy India Still Needs

India is already doing pieces of what a coherent strategy would require: higher gold duties to ration a non-essential import, messaging aimed at reducing foreign travel and dollar demand, and a shift from defending fixed levels toward smoothing volatility.

But these measures are reactive—firefighting rather than framework.

A Coherent Package: Direction + Protection + Industrial Use

India can make deliberate depreciation socially viable because it has stronger targeting capacity than in earlier decades. Direct Benefit Transfers reach hundreds of central schemes and thousands of state programmes. This makes it possible to shield the bottom 40–50% from import-price pass-through with fine-grained precision.

Protect what truly matters—food, essentials, public transport, fertiliser, and cooking fuel. Let upper-income import preferences adjust.

A coherent package then becomes:

  • managed depreciation that reduces volatility without blocking direction,
  • targeted cushioning for essential consumption,
  • industrial policy that directs exchange-rate benefits into manufacturing investment, and
  • reserve management that preserves capacity for genuine shocks rather than routine delay.

The Cost of “Delaying the Inevitable”

The danger is not a rupee at 100. The danger is arriving there after burning reserves to postpone adjustment. That is the most expensive route to the same destination.

The Path to Economic Power Runs Through a Weaker Currency

India is not exempt from the rule. In fact, it is the country most determined—so far—to behave as if the rule does not apply.

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

General Sundarji Was the Exception. That Is the Problem-THE THINKING GENERAL

 

1. Early Life & Career

  • Born into an egalitarian Tamil Brahmin family, Sundarji’s secular and non-dogmatic outlook shaped his career.

  • Joined the Army via Emergency Commission (1945), witnessed Partition violence firsthand.

  • Served in Congo with UN Peacekeeping Force, earning a reputation as a “maverick.”

  • Rose steadily, becoming the first infantry officer to command an armoured division and later 33 Corps.

2. Major Operations

  • Operation Blue Star (1984): Tactical failure; Sundarji’s frontal assault showed overconfidence and lack of patience.

  • Exercise Brasstacks (1986–87): India’s largest military exercise, validated his doctrines of manoeuvre, mobility, and firepower.

  • Operation Pawan (IPKF in Sri Lanka): Strategic miscalculation; underestimated LTTE resilience.

  • Operation Falcon (1986–87): High-altitude face-off with China at Sumdorong Chu; Sundarji’s bold forward posture and heli-lift strategy forced China to back down, boosting Indian Army confidence.

3. Strategic Contributions

  • Modernisation & Mechanisation: Advocated combined arms, mobility, and technology-driven warfare, moving away from British WWII doctrines.

  • Nuclear Deterrence: Wrote extensively on nuclear policy; influenced India’s doctrine of No First Use, Credible Minimum Deterrence, and Massive Retaliation.

  • Emphasised avoiding “obscene amassing of unusable weapons” and protecting India’s economic/social interests.

4. Leadership Style

  • Anti-status-quo, intellectually bold, supportive of subordinates, and open to new ideas.

  • Advocated professional excellence with ethical grounding; his letter to officers remains a “gold standard.”

  • Disapproved of sycophancy, encouraged honest debate and innovation.

5. Legacy

  • Sundarji’s tenure showed how much influence a military leader can wield in a democracy when backed politically.

  • His vision laid the foundation for India’s Mountain Strike Corps and modern doctrines.

  • Despite flaws (Blue Star, IPKF), his resilience, intellect, and risk-taking made him unique among Indian military leaders.

  • The problem: few Indian generals since have matched his intellectual depth or willingness to shape long-term strategic thinking.

📌 Key Takeaway

General Sundarji was a rare “thinking general” who transformed India’s military doctrine, modernised its outlook, and shaped nuclear deterrence. His successes and failures highlight both the potential and the risks of bold military leadership. His uniqueness underscores a broader issue: India’s armed forces have lacked similarly visionary leaders since.

Industrial Policy – Not the What, But the How

 

Summary: Industrial Policy – Not the What, But the How

1. The Debate in India

  • For decades, Indian commentary has been split:

    • Dirigistes: argue reforms went too far, want state-led industrial policy back.

    • Liberalisers: warn that state direction revives licence-raj inefficiencies.

  • Chief Economic Advisor Dr. V. Anantha Nageswaran reframes the debate: India never stopped industrial policy; the issue is not what policy, but how it is implemented.

2. The “Missing Middle” Problem

  • India has millions of micro firms and a few large ones, but very few mid-sized enterprises.

  • Decades of SME-friendly policies (reservations, subsidies, carve-outs) created survival, not competitiveness.

  • Nageswaran: “It is not for want of the what. It is a want of the how.”

3. Lessons from East Asia

  • Northeast Asia (Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore): aggressive industrial policy succeeded due to discipline — time-bound protections, export-performance requirements, simulated competition.

  • Southeast Asia (Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand): similar tools but failed due to permanent protection and lack of discipline.

  • India’s record resembles Southeast Asia: protection without discipline.

4. Discipline Framework

Nageswaran outlines three principles:

  1. Simulate competition where none exists (R&D quotas, benchmarks).

  2. Benchmark globally — firms must compete internationally.

  3. Time-bound protections — tariffs, subsidies, duties must be reviewed and withdrawn when ineffective.

5. India’s Second Chance

  • The window for industrial policy reopened due to deglobalisation trends (Brexit, COVID, Ukraine war, US-China trade conflict).

  • Every major economy is now pursuing industrial policy (US CHIPS Act, EU Critical Raw Materials Act, China’s ongoing state-led model).

  • India has demographic strength, macro stability, and geopolitical opportunity.

  • Current instruments: PLI scheme, cluster revival, deregulation, IndiaAI Mission, Gift City sandbox.

6. Early Grades

  • PLI Scheme: well-designed (time-bound, performance-linked). Some sectors (mobiles, semiconductors) show progress; others lag. The test is whether failures are shut down or politically entrenched.

  • Tariff Protection: danger zone — politically permanent, risks becoming “Indonesian-style” entrenchment.

  • Cluster Manufacturing: promising (e.g., Tirupur apparel cluster), but still smaller than global competitors (Dhaka). Needs export discipline to scale.

7. The Test Ahead

  • India must embed discipline into industrial policy:

    • Sunset clauses that actually expire.

    • Independent cost-benefit reviews.

    • Willingness to let firms fail if they don’t deliver.

    • Accountability for clusters to scale globally.

  • The next 20 years will decide whether India resembles Korea (success) or Indonesia (failure).

  • Nehru wanted growth too — but chose the wrong instruments. India must now choose better ones and have the courage to withdraw them when necessary.

India’s Space Problem Is launch frequency Not Engineering

 

🚀 Summary:

1. Satellite Industry vs Launch Industry

  • India’s satellite engineering sector (GalaxEye, Pixxel, Digantara, Dhruva Space) is thriving, producing world-class payloads.

  • The launch industry, however, lags behind — low flight rates and recent PSLV failures have forced Indian satellites to fly on foreign rockets (mainly SpaceX Falcon 9).

2. The Cadence Challenge

  • Sovereignty in space depends not on cheaper rockets but on launch frequency (cadence).

  • ISRO launches ~5–6 rockets annually, compared to SpaceX’s ~165 launches in 2025.

  • Low cadence weakens reliability, institutional discipline, and cost amortisation.

3. Economics of Launch

  • SpaceX rideshare: ~$5,500/kg to SSO.

  • PSLV-XL: ~$17,000/kg (3× more expensive).

  • LVM3: ~$5,000/kg but flies only 2–3 times a year, limiting cost efficiency.

  • Reusability reduces costs only when flight rates are high — India is a decade behind in reusable launch vehicles.

4. Strategic Gap

  • India has not sanctioned the 140-satellite sovereign LEO broadband constellation (₹30,000 crore, 5–7 years).

  • Without this anchor demand, launch cadence will remain low, private launch startups (Skyroot, Agnikul, EtherealX) risk collapse, and the upcoming Next Generation Launch Vehicle (Soorya/NGLV) may fail due to a hollowed supplier base.

5. Global Comparisons

  • China: Guowang + G60 Thousand Sails → ~27,000 satellites planned, 92 launches in 2025.

  • Europe: IRIS² constellation (2022).

  • USA: Starlink (accidental industrial policy).

  • India has scoped its constellation but delayed political approval.

6. Policy Choices

  • Arguments against constellation: cheaper to buy foreign launch services, avoid duplication with Starlink/OneWeb.

  • Counter-arguments:

    • Foreign launch access may be restricted by geopolitics.

    • Private launch firms cannot survive without anchor demand.

    • NGLV depends on a healthy ecosystem, which requires cadence.

7. What India Must Do

  • Approve the 140-satellite constellation within 18 months.

  • Expand launch infrastructure (new pads at Sriharikota, Kulasekarapattinam).

  • Empower IN-SPACe with purchasing authority.

  • Provide anchor contracts to private launch firms.

  • Protect NGLV from delays by ensuring steady launch demand.

📌 Key Takeaway

India’s satellite industry is world-class, but its launch sovereignty is at risk. Without a bold political decision to create sovereign demand (via the 140-satellite constellation), India may end up with satellites designed at home but launched abroad — undermining strategic autonomy in space.

भारताचा शेअर बाजार घसरला-REASONS

 

 

  • भारताचा जागतिक क्रमांक ५ वरून ७ वर घसरला.

  • बाजार भांडवल आता ४.८ ट्रिलियन डॉलर, तर तैवान व दक्षिण कोरिया ५ ट्रिलियन डॉलरपेक्षा जास्त.

  • कारणे: परदेशी गुंतवणूकदारांचा मोठा पलायन, आयटी क्षेत्रातील कमजोरी, आणि अमेरिका–इराण संघर्षाचा परिणाम.

🚀 तैवान व दक्षिण कोरियाची भरारी

  • कृत्रिम बुद्धिमत्ता (AI) व सेमीकंडक्टर उद्योगामुळे मोठी वाढ.

  • तैवान: TSMC मध्ये ५०% वाढ, आता बाजार भांडवलाच्या ४०–४५% हिस्सा.

  • दक्षिण कोरिया: Samsung व SK Hynix यांनी मेमरी-चिप मागणीमुळे बाजारात वर्चस्व मिळवले.

  • Kospi ९९% YTD, Taiex ५५% YTD वाढ.

📊 भारतातील कमजोरी

  • Sensex: डिसेंबर २०२५ मध्ये ८६,१५९ उच्चांक, आता १३% घसरला.

  • Nifty50: १०.९% YTD घसरण, अमेरिका–इराण युद्धानंतर ६.७% खाली.

  • आयटी क्षेत्र: TCS (−२४%), Infosys (−२२%), HCL (−२३%), Wipro (−२१%).

  • FPIs: २०२६ मध्ये आतापर्यंत ₹२.३ लाख कोटींची विक्री.

  • MSCI EM निर्देशांकात भारताचा हिस्सा १९% वरून १२% झाला.

🌍 बाह्य दबाव

  • अमेरिका–इराण संघर्षामुळे गुंतवणूकदार सुरक्षित मालमत्तेकडे वळले.

  • कच्च्या तेलाच्या किंमती वाढल्याने परकीय चलन साठ्यावर ताण.

  • रुपया घसरला: १ USD = ₹९५ पेक्षा जास्त.

  • अमेरिकेचे शुल्क: २०२५ मध्ये ५०% शुल्क, नंतर १८% पर्यंत कमी.

🔮 पुढील दिशा

  • पुनरुज्जीवनासाठी आवश्यक:

    • अमेरिका–इराण संघर्षाचा शेवट

    • कच्च्या तेलाच्या किंमती $८५/barrel पर्यंत खाली येणे

    • कॉर्पोरेट नफा वाढ (CY25 मध्ये १३%, CY26 मध्ये १६% अपेक्षित).

  • भारताची मूलभूत ताकद कायम:

    • GDP वाढ ७% पेक्षा जास्त

    • महागाई फक्त २.१% (दशकातील नीचांकी)

    • लोकसंख्या लाभ, धोरणात्मक गुंतवणूक, बचतीचे वित्तीयीकरण.

  • तज्ज्ञांचे मत: तैवान व कोरियाची वाढ काही कंपन्यांवरच अवलंबून, त्यामुळे टिकाऊपणाबद्दल शंका.

थोडक्यात: तैवान व दक्षिण कोरिया यांनी AI सेमीकंडक्टर उद्योगामुळे झपाट्याने वाढ केली, तर भारताला परदेशी गुंतवणूकदारांचा पलायन, आयटी क्षेत्रातील घसरण, आणि भू-राजकीय संकटामुळे फटका बसला. दीर्घकालीन दृष्टीने भारताची पायाभूत ताकद मजबूत आहे, पण अल्पकालीन सुधारणा जागतिक स्थैर्य व ऊर्जा किंमतींवर अवलंबून आहे.

REASONS-India’s Stock Market Drop

 


  • India slipped from 5th to 7th largest stock market globally in just over a week.

  • Market capitalization fell to $4.8 trillion, overtaken by Taiwan ($5 trillion+) and South Korea ($5 trillion).

  • The decline is linked to foreign capital exodus, weak IT sector performance, and external shocks like the US–Iran conflict.

🚀 Why Taiwan & South Korea Surged

  • AI-driven semiconductor boom fueled rallies.

  • Taiwan: TSMC rallied 50%, now accounts for 40–45% of Taiwan’s market cap.

  • South Korea: Samsung & SK Hynix benefited from AI memory-chip demand, making up 50% of Korea’s market cap.

  • Both markets saw record-breaking gains: Kospi up 99% YTD, Taiex up 55% YTD.

📊 India’s Market Weakness

  • Sensex: Hit lifetime high of 86,159 in Dec 2025, now down 13%.

  • Nifty50: Down 10.9% YTD, 6.7% since US–Iran war began.

  • IT sector: TCS (−24%), Infosys (−22%), HCL (−23%), Wipro (−21%).

  • Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs): Net sellers almost every month in 2026, withdrawing ₹2.3 lakh crore so far.

  • India’s weight in MSCI EM index fell from 19% to 12%.

🌍 External Pressures

  • US–Iran conflict triggered global risk aversion.

  • Rising crude oil prices strained forex reserves.

  • Rupee depreciation: Worst-performing Asian currency, now over ₹95 per USD.

  • Tariffs: US imposed 50% tariffs in 2025 (later reduced to 18%), causing investor flight.

🔮 Outlook

  • Analysts say India’s recovery depends on:

    • Resolution of US–Iran conflict

    • Crude oil prices falling to ~$85/barrel

    • Earnings growth revival (expected 13% in CY25, 16% in CY26)

  • India’s fundamentals remain strong:

    • GDP growth above 7%

    • Inflation at 2.1% (lowest in decades)

    • Structural drivers: demographic dividend, policy-driven capex, financialization of savings.

  • Experts caution that Taiwan & Korea’s rallies are concentrated in a few firms, raising sustainability concerns.

In short: Taiwan and South Korea surged ahead of India due to the AI semiconductor boom, while India faced foreign capital outflows, IT sector weakness, and geopolitical shocks. Long-term fundamentals for India remain intact, but near-term recovery hinges on global stability and energy prices.

The Anti-Bucket List: The Freedom of Not Wanting Everything Author : Dr Prasad Rajhans 🦢

 


A few years ago, success was easier to define.

Study well. Get a good job. Build a family. Live a respectable life.

Today, success appears to have expanded in hundreds of directions.

Your friends are running marathons. Someone has completed an Ironman. A colleague is posting photographs from the Himalayas. Another is skydiving. Someone else is visiting remote temples across the world. One friend has become a wildlife photographer. Another has learned guitar at 45. Yet another is practicing yoga in Bali.

Open social media for ten minutes, and it can feel as if everyone is living extraordinary lives.

And slowly, without realizing it, a thought enters the mind:

Am I missing out?

Maybe I should travel more.
Maybe I should trek.
Maybe I should run a marathon.
Maybe I should learn music.
Maybe I should visit more countries.
Maybe I should do something remarkable.

The list keeps growing.

That is the modern bucket list.

But somewhere in the middle of all this comparison, another question quietly emerges:

Who decided these things should be on my list in the first place?

I once heard a friend say:

“Why would I wake up at 4 a.m. just to run after a tiger in the jungle?”
For him, wildlife safaris held no attraction.

For someone else, watching a tiger in the wild might be a lifelong dream.

Neither person is wrong.

That is perhaps one of the most important truths we forget:

Human beings are not meant to enjoy the same things.

Some people love adventure.
Some enjoy meditation.
Some prefer mountain expeditions.
Others enjoy sitting silently near the sea.

Some people travel to twenty countries.

Others may spend a week in one town, understanding the people, culture, food, and silence.

Some may genuinely be happiest at home.

And happiness experienced quietly is no less valuable than happiness displayed publicly.

As children, many of us belonged to generations where joy was simpler.

Summer holidays often meant staying with relatives.

Watching a movie on television could feel special.

Going out for ice cream was an event worth remembering.

Small pleasures carried excitement because they were rare.

Today, we have abundance.

Unlimited travel options.
Unlimited entertainment.
Unlimited information.
Unlimited experiences.

Ironically, unlimited choices often create unlimited pressure.

Psychologists call part of this choice overload—when too many possibilities increase anxiety rather than satisfaction.

Because once everything becomes possible, people begin feeling responsible for experiencing everything.

But no human being can do everything.

No one can visit every country.

Learn every skill.
Play every sport.
Attend every event.
See every wonder.
Live every life.

Perhaps this is where a new idea becomes useful:

The Anti-Bucket List

An anti-bucket list is not pessimism.

It is not laziness.
It is not a lack of ambition.
It is something far more liberating.

An anti-bucket list is a conscious decision about the things you do not need in order to feel fulfilled.

The experiences you do not wish to chase.

The expectations you choose not to inherit.

The comparisons you decide to stop making.

Maybe your anti-bucket list says:

• I do not need to run a marathon.
• I do not need to visit fifty countries.
• I do not need to learn every hobby.
• I do not need public proof that I am living well.
• I do not need to convert every experience into content.

And surprisingly, saying “I don’t need this” can sometimes bring more peace than saying “I must achieve this.”

There is another quiet consequence of modern life.

People sometimes become so busy photographing moments that they stop living them.

A beautiful landscape is viewed through a mobile screen.

A sunset becomes content.
A journey becomes evidence.
A holiday becomes documentation.

And somewhere in between, the actual experience disappears.

Perhaps some of the most meaningful moments in life are those never uploaded, never announced, and never validated by others.

Only lived.
Only felt.
Only remembered.

Maybe the purpose of an anti-bucket list is simple:

Not to reduce life.

But to reduce unnecessary pressure.

To create room for authenticity.

To stop living every possible life—and start living your own.

Because at the end of the day, fulfillment may not come from checking the most boxes.

INDIA IS REPLACING CHINESE CC TV CAMARAS PART 2

 

This Dependency Didn’t Happen by Accident

The Engineering Phase Begins

The penetration of Chinese surveillance and IoT hardware into India—and globally—was not just free-market competition. It was engineered. And the engineering has entered a new phase.

China’s 2026–2028 IoT Action Plan

In mid-March 2026, nine central Chinese ministries jointly released a new action plan for China’s IoT industry covering 2026–2028. It builds on directives dating back to 2009, when Beijing designated IoT as a “strategic emerging industry” and a “commanding heights” driver of industrial competition.

From Gadgets to Cyber-Physical Control

This plan defines IoT not as consumer tech, but as a total cyber-physical environment—aimed at “ubiquitous intelligent connections among people, machines, and things,” linking the digital and physical worlds.

Five Layers of Control

The industry is structured across five layers:

  1. Sensing (physical devices like cameras and sensors)
  2. Networks (communications infrastructure)
  3. Platforms (software aggregating, storing, processing data)
  4. Applications (services built on top of everything)
  5. Security (access, authentication, and trust frameworks)

Control the layers, and you control what runs on them.

Standards as the Strategic Weapon

The most consequential element is standards. The plan calls for improving the IoT standards system and mapping the “core industrial chain.” Standards determine discovery, authentication, data movement, and interoperability. If the country writing the rules also controls the largest base of connected devices, the rest of the world must comply.

Alignment With China’s 15th Five-Year Plan

Read alongside China’s 15th Five-Year Plan (also released in March 2026), the vision becomes vertically integrated: pooled computing power, satellite internet for coverage beyond terrestrial networks, telecom modernization from 5G through 6G, and data systems governing authentication and access.

A Vertically Integrated Stack

Together, the IoT action plan and five-year plan imply a cyber-physical system where China supplies multiple layers—from endpoints and platforms to compute, connectivity, and standards.

Dependency Becomes Interoperability

This is what much commentary misses: it’s not merely cheap devices being sold. It is architecture being defined—so that even “local replacements” may still operate within rules written elsewhere.

Every Layer Deepens the Attack Surface

Each layer increases interoperability, remote manageability, and embedding into city, factory, power, and transport systems—expanding the surface area for attack even without increasing the number of devices.


The “Secure and Controllable” Meaning

“Backdoors” as a Recognized Risk

Chinese security discussions acknowledge that connected products can include backdoors enabling remote control or covert data collection.

Control Over the System—not Just the Equipment

When leaders emphasize “secure and controllable” digital infrastructure, “controllable” functions as political-technical leverage: shaping who benefits, who can access systems, and what happens when relationships turn adversarial.


How India Is Trying to Fix It

STQC: The Most Immediate Lever

While Delhi removes Hikvision cameras, the policy framework enabling this shift has been building. The clearest tool is STQC certification.

The Essential Requirements (April 2024)

In April 2024, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology introduced Essential Requirements for CCTV cameras and video surveillance systems. Internet-connected cameras sold or imported in India must be tested and certified at accredited STQC labs before entering the market. Manufacturers must declare the origin of critical components—especially SoCs and firmware—and submit both hardware and software for vulnerability testing.

Compliance Deadline: 1 April 2026

The industry had two years to comply. That window closed on 1 April 2026.

Who Gets Denied Certification

STQC is significant not only for testing—it also restricts access. As described in the text, Indian authorities refused to certify products from Hikvision, Dahua, and TP-Link, and also devices using Chinese-origin chipsets or firmware. Without STQC clearance, those products cannot legally be sold.

Certification Numbers and Market Control

As of early 2026, 507 camera models had been certified. Indian brands reportedly control over 80% of the domestic CCTV market. Companies like CP Plus, Sparsh, Prama, Matrix, and Qubo have shifted supply chains toward Taiwanese chipsets and locally developed firmware, while global players like Bosch and Honeywell focus on premium segments.

Delhi’s Replacement Plan

Delhi’s PWD announced an initial rollout of 50,000 cameras, replacing Chinese units with “secure and trusted systems,” using a phased approach to avoid disrupting live surveillance coverage.

But the Problem Is National

Delhi is the beginning. Hikvision and Dahua hardware remains embedded across metro systems and central government buildings, and eventually each installation would need similar treatment.


Can CP Plus Rebuild Its Independence?

CP Plus’ Three Moves

With Dahua distribution effectively ended, CP Plus is investing in three areas:

  • Developing indigenous Indian-IP SoCs via collaboration with L&T Semiconductor Technologies
  • Working with VVDN Technologies for embedded systems and IoT device design/manufacturing
  • Establishing an R&D center in Noida (with 86 engineers as of March 2025)

The Speed Challenge

The direction is correct, but the pace is the question. Designing production-grade vision-processing SoCs that compete with a decade of refinement is a multi-year effort—measured in years, not quarters.


India’s Security Layers Beyond CCTV

Telecom: Trusted Vendors and Managed Risk

India blocked Huawei and ZTE from 5G and new telecom infrastructure contracts years ago through security directives beginning December 2020 and tightening over time. The framework requires operators to procure equipment only from “trusted sources” approved by the National Cyber Security Coordinator. Huawei and ZTE were excluded from 5G trials in 2021.

Telecom Act 2023 and Tightening Enforcement

The Telecommunications Act 2023 replaced the Indian Telegraph Act 1885 and established a modern telecom security framework. Since then, oversight has expanded: formal cybersecurity policies, always-on monitoring, and appointment of senior security officers.

Time-Bound Breach Reporting

Breach reporting has become more time-bound, aligning with CERT-In’s six-hour disclosure expectations. The government also reserves audit and intervention rights when vulnerabilities are discovered.

IoT Certification Schemes and Code of Practice

For consumer IoT devices more broadly, India introduced the Code of Practice for Securing Consumer IoT Devices and the IoT System Certification Scheme under ITSAR. These may not yet match STQC’s enforcement readiness, but they extend security-by-design and certification direction beyond CCTV.

Patchwork Instead of One Big Law

Rather than a single sweeping law like the EU’s Cyber Resilience Act, India is assembling a layered patchwork—trusted telecom vendors, national security directives, STQC for surveillance devices, telecom cyber rules for detection and response, and IoT certification schemes for a wider set of connected products.


The Contest Still Isn’t Finished

STQC Fixes Endpoints, Not the Stack

STQC addresses endpoints (cameras and terminals) but not the deeper layers underneath.

What China Covers—and India Still Doesn’t

Beijing’s model covers sensing, networks, platforms, applications, security, and standards. India is contesting sensing and beginning guardrails on networks, but the platform and standards layers remain largely open.

Replacing Devices May Not Replace the Rules

If standards and protocols remain defined elsewhere, swapping a camera or base station won’t fully fix the underlying dependency—because systems will still operate within externally set interoperability rules.

Still, Every Replacement Creates Leverage

Even incomplete progress matters. Each removal forces integrators to compete with non-Chinese components, builds a procurement pipeline, and creates market momentum toward alternatives.

The Risk of Declaring “Finish Line” Too Soon

Replacing a camera brand isn’t the same as replacing the architecture it was designed to plug into. The ceiling camera was a symptom. The disease is dependency on an ecosystem built to keep that dependency invisible until it is too late.

India Has Begun the Surgery

The question is whether the surgery will go deep enough to reach the architecture—not just the hardware.