Poging GOUD - Vrij

The Many Uses Of Cow Dung

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

|

April 1-15, 2019

Maneka Sanjay Gandhi, Minister, Women & Child Welfare, GoI

The Many Uses Of Cow Dung

Lakhs of people die in India every day. The Muslims bury their dead. The Hindus burn theirs. Conventionally, firewood, electricity or LG gas is used to burn human bodies all over the world. But there is no more ‘waste’ wood left to burn. In Delhi they have found a unique solution. The government gardeners pretend they are going to ‘trim’ the existing trees. They lop off most of the large branches (often killing the tree) and sell them to Nigambodh ghat. The profit is given to the whole department – much like the traffic police share their bribes with the entire thana. In rural India, a death in the village means a tree is cut down, and the most common victims are mango trees. So, wild mangoes are disappearing and with them goes the entire pickle industry. It takes about 600 kilos of wood to burn one body. The cost to the survivor is above 15,000 or more. The act itself of cutting a tree is illegal, but who cares when a parent needs to be cremated.

A separate problem is the cow that has stopped giving milk. The farmer does not want to sell her to the butchers, but he does. Or leaves her on the road to fend for herself. She wanders into the fields and is beaten to death with lathis. Or her legs are cut viciously by the barbed wire that most farmers use illegally. Hundreds of terribly wounded cows come to my hospital in Bareilly every day, their skin stripped off their thighs and their bones exposed.

Gaushalas are few and far between. And most of them are prison cells for this gentle animal, who often starves to death in the gaushala itself. There is no proper management of any gaushala, no doctors, and often the owners show the same disdain towards the milkless cow that her previous owners did.

MEER VERHALEN VAN BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

India's Economic Resilience in 2025: Navigating Global Headwinds with Domestic Strength

The Indian economy in 2025 continues to display remarkable resilience, driven by reorientation, reform, and robust fundamentals. Despite global challenges such as trade tensions and geopolitical uncertainty, India has sustained strong growth. This momentum has been powered by digital innovation, strategic public spending, and resilient domestic consumption.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

India's Russian Oil Strategy: A New Chapter in Energy Diplomacy

How Strategic Autonomy and Economic Rationality Are Redefining India's Global Role

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

E-commerce platforms roll out grand sale strategies to boost festive spending

India's festive ecommerce season has opened on a high note, with Flipkart and Amazon registering record traffic and sales during their flagship events — The Big Billion Days (TBBD) and The Great Indian Festival (GIF), respectively. Strong consumer sentiment, GST cuts, and rising participation from Gen Z shoppers have created the most dynamic start yet for India's digital retail market.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Data Patterns India Ltd

On November 11, 1998, the company, “Indus Teqsite Private Limited,” was founded in Bangalore, Karnataka, as a Private Limited Company in accordance with the Companies Act of 1956.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Beyond the Dollar: Gold, Silver and the new axis of reserve power

The year 2025 has brought unanticipated shifts in global financial markets.

time to read

4 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Indian Currency Under Crisis: RBI's Intervention to Prop Up the Rupee

The Indian rupee, like many emerging market currencies, has come under significant pressure over the past several months. This has coincided with a period of sustained depreciation of the US dollar, which has been weakening since Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States on January 20, 2025.

time to read

4 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Economics Nobel 2025 awarded to three economic historians for research on Innovation-Led Growth

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences has been awarded to Israeli-American Joel Mokyr of Northwestern University, Philippe Aghion of Collège de France and the London School of Economics, and Peter Howitt of Brown University for their pioneering research “for having explained innovation-driven economic growth.”

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Indians and Their Enduring Love for Gold

Indians love gold. For many, it remains a safer and more dependable savings option than real estate, stocks, or bonds.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

GST rate cuts, Income Tax relief, and subsidies to Entrepreneurs will help sustain growth, says CEA – But experts remain skeptical

V. Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) to the Government of India, has expressed confidence that India's GDP will grow by 7% in the second half of the current financial year (FY). He noted that the 7.8% GDP growth recorded in the previous two quarters had already been anticipated.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

India's fields of the future: Harvesting sunlight and crops together

India's farmland has always carried the burden of uncertainty.

time to read

2 mins

October 01 - 31, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size