Niti Aayog VC Rajiv Kumar: India needs to grow at 10.5-11% in next fiscal | India Business News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: India needs to grow at 10.5-11 per cent in real terms in the next fiscal and sustain that to overcome massive ill-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, Niti Aayog vice chairman Rajiv Kumar said on Friday.
Kumar further said India needs to be prepared for the next pandemic as the country was caught unprepared during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“We need to grow at 10.5 to 11 per cent in real terms 2021-22 and then sustain that to overcome massive ill-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said while addressing a virtual event organised by National CSR Network.
India’s economy is estimated to contract 8 per cent in fiscal 2020-21.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has projected India’s economic growth in 2021-22 at 10.5 per cent, while chief economic adviser K V Subramanian has projected an 11 per cent growth for the same period.
The Niti Aayog vice-chairman also noted that the Indian economy is now surging towards a recovery.
“We have to make sure that we take everybody along,” he said.
The last time India suffered due to a pandemic was during the Spanish Flu in 1918 and the country lost 5-7 per cent population, Kumar added.
“We better prepare for the next pandemic. We were caught unprepared (during the Covid-19 crisis).
“…We did not know the extent to which our people will be affected. Migrants took us by surprise,” he said.
Noting that the business as usual will not do, Kumar said there is a need to reduce the size of India’s informal economy.
He pointed out that corporations and the government are fighting the pandemic together.
“Development agenda cannot be entirely advanced by the government alone. Political leaders and corporate leaders need to work together,” he said.
Observing that India’s political leaders, including Mahatma Gandhi, had no qualms in working with corporate leaders, he said, “It is time again to rekindle that”.
“Time therefore to get over this nonsense of calling names of corporate leaders or mistrusting the corporate leaders,” he added.
Kumar noted that corporate social responsibility (CSR) is the bridge between corporate and society.
The CSR can be a bridge between the government and corporate also, he added.
“The CSR is critical to the working of society and economy.
“The CSR is misunderstood, CSR is not charity but something essential to Corporates,” he said.

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Delhi World Cup a test event before Tokyo Olympics: Sanjeev Rajput | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Seasoned Indian rifleman Sanjeev Rajput on Thursday said the Delhi World Cup could act as a perfect testing ground for shooters before the Tokyo Olympics as they return to top-flight competition after more than a year due to COVID-19 pandemic.
Barring those in the shotgun, Indian shooters’ last international appearance was the season-ending ISSF World Cup Finals in Putian, China, from where they returned with an impressive medal haul. Just as they looked to continue their dominant run, the pandemic broke out and disrupted normal life last March.
Having run out of ideas and patience after taking aim in his basement, bedroom and hall, Rajput was one of the first shooters to have resumed outdoor training, albeit in an empty 50m range, last summer.
“This World Cup is significant in the sense that it could act as a test event for the shooters before the Olympics,” Rajput told PTI on the eve of the tournament, to be held at the Dr Karni Singh Shooting Range.
“One can also call it a kind of a dress rehearsal before the Games. This is also going to offer quotas based on rankings and the shooters who are yet to secure quotas will definitely look forward to clinching them here,” the ace marksman added.
The 40-year-old Rajput secured his Tokyo Olympics quota in the 2019 Rio de Janeiro World Cup when he gunned down a silver in the men’s 50m rifle 3 positions event.
Since the 2008 Games, he has secured an Olympic quota four times on the trot but competed twice.
Rajput is quite satisfied with the way he has prepared for the tournament and the system put in place by the local organising committee, National Rifle Association of India (NRAI), and also thanked the government for making it possible in the COVID-19 times.
“By hosting this tournament, India will set an example of how to conduct big sporting events in the COVID era. The sports ministry, Sports Authority of India (SAI) and NRAI deserve all the credit for ensuring the tournament takes place in a very safe environment,” Rajput said.
He was one of the shooters present during the pre-tournament press conference here on Wednesday.
“I am relaxed looking at the way they have managed everything. Except while they are in the firing line, the shooters are required to keep wearing their masks at all times. There is a kind of a wall made with what looked like plastic or acrylic between every shooting stations.
“We will be undergoing a COVID test the day before our events. So, the guidelines are being strictly adhered to.”
A total of 294 athletes and 109 officials from 53 countries, including a 57-member Indian contingent, will be seen in action in the first multi-nation Olympic sporting event of this scale anywhere in the world post the pandemic-forced lockdown.
Shooters participating in the tournament will be undergoing three COVID-19 tests — on arrival at the airport, 24 hours before their first competition and finally before leaving for their respective destinations.
As part of the SOP, all officials/media will be tested, wearing of masks is mandatory and there will be temperature checks at entry points. There will be isolation rooms and regular sanitisation will be done.
The first qualifying rounds of the tournament begin on Friday, with the first finals scheduled for Saturday.

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Woman Creates Different Versions of Herself as Birthday Party Guests During Lockdown Solitude

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The COVID-19 pandemic induced isolation and quarantine doesn’t seem to end. Though many people have started going out again, many are still taking all possible precautions by avoiding large gatherings or meeting others.

While it can be difficult to isolate, it’s even more annoying when there is a genuine cause for celebration and one cannot do it properly. But some people are taking the lemons this pandemic has thrown at them to make some fun lemonade — like throwing an isolation birthday party with multiple versions of yourself.

Shared on Reddit by user u/MissJinxed, this birthday party is rather special. Titled “Couldn’t go out to celebrate my birthday during lockdown, so I threw a party for myself” is a photograph featuring a normal party scene in a living room. But you may want to look closely. All the “party” guests are various versions of the same girl, dressed in different attires, indulged in different “party” activities.

One “guest” in red dress is dancing on the windowsill, a couple of “guests” are seated on the floor, taking selfies. Each guest has a different personality, as you may expect to have in a large gathering of people. A girl in white top and maroon skirt is chugging wine straight out of the bottle. Another one, dressed in leopard print clothing and styled like an Instagram influencer, is taking a selfie.

Every party has at least one introvert who is kind of anti-social. That guest is seated with a full mask on, distanced from everyone, eyeing others with judgy looks. A “male guest” sits with a solo cup in his hand while a girl in maroon dress looks like to be hitting on him.

This wholesome party picture has gathered over 129K upvotes!

“That one where you disguise yourself as a guy is next f****** level,” wrote one user. But the OP replied it’s not her but an actual guy.This is not the first time someone has thrown a photoshopped quarantine party.

User radesalvo31 shared his birthday party on Imgur with similar “guests.” His party pictures are a lot more elaborate. There are games, birthday cake, and even a surprise entry of the birthday boy!

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Most economies not to return to pre-pandemic activity levels until 2022: Moody’s

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Moody’s said it expects a slow and bumpy global recovery and uncertainty around the macroeconomic outlook remains much higher than usual.

Moody’s Investors Service on Thursday said the credit downturn arising out of COVID-19 will be short-lived but most economies will not return to pre-pandemic activity levels until 2022.

In the year since the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared COVID-19 a pandemic on March 11, 2020, the virus has disrupted the global economy and triggered a credit downturn accompanied by a spike in bond defaults.

“The credit challenges arising from COVID-19 have been substantial, but the credit downturn likely will be relatively short-lived. Risks remain more significant for the sectors most vulnerable to restrictions on their normal activities,” Moody’s said in a global report in coronavirus.

Stating that most economies will not return to pre-pandemic activity levels until 2022, Moody’s said it expects a slow and bumpy global recovery and uncertainty around the macroeconomic outlook remains much higher than usual.

Policy actions will continue to support economic activity and financial markets after the pandemic has eased, it added. Policymakers will continue to support economic activity long after the pandemic has faded, in some cases for years, Moody’s said. Moody’s expects the incidence and prevalence of the pandemic to gradually decline over the course of this year, as vaccination numbers rise. In turn, this will allow governments to gradually ease lockdown measures.

However, a residual level of COVID-19 likely will persist over time, raising the prospect of global pockets of risk in regions where vaccination progress is slow, and of localised outbreaks.

“In addition, new mutations that increase the virulence or spread of the virus pose a key risk to efforts to normalise conditions. Rather than eliminating the virus, we expect to ‘learn to live with it’ at low case rates,” it added.

The rating agency said it took several rating actions in response to the credit consequences of the pandemic and does not expect to conduct another wholesale review of credit ratings this year unless there is a significant shock to the global economy or to financial markets, or a shock resulting from a dramatic change in the trajectory of the virus.

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Colleges reopen in rural areas of Thane after 11 months

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Colleges reopened in rural parts of Maharashtra’s Thane district on Monday, after being shut for nearly 11 months in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Collector Rajesh Narvekar in an order issued on Sunday allowed reopening of colleges only in rural areas of the district.

The order said only 50 per cent attendance will be allowed in a day and the educational institutions will have to strictly follow all COVID-19 prevention guidelines. Action will be taken against colleges which are found to be violating the regulations and not holding sessions as specified in the order, the collector said.

With regard to colleges falling under urban limits, directions of the municipal corporation concerned will be applicable, he said. On Sunday, Thane reported 354 new cases of COVID-19, taking the tally in the district to 2,57,745.

So far, 6,202 people have died of the viral infection in the district, as per official figures.

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