Times of India | 04 April 2022

Covid-19 appears to be transitioning to an endemic. There is always the threat of a new variant but the hope is that this is the endgame. The government has withdrawn the Disaster Management Act, freeing the states to respond to the disease. A virus, ten-thousandth of a millimetre in diameter, has tested our character, our governance. What have we learned? How did we fare?

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Essays, Hindustan Times | 13 February 2022

This Budget chooses job creation over freebies and this is a victory

By choosing investment over consumption, and job creation over freebies, this Budget has opted for the long-term dignity and prosperity of Indians. (Yogendra Kumar/HT PHOTO)

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Times of India | 11 October 2021

Tatas will have to infuse substantial equity and run two brands to optimise the Air India acquisition

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Essays, Times of India | 30 August 2021

In the past few weeks, a series of disquieting events have raised the question of trust between government and business. It brought back unhappy memories of the License Raj. Some think that getting government and business to trust each other is hopeless, like getting a pig to sing. ‘It wastes your time and annoys the pig,’ said Mark Twain. Others are wary of crony capitalism, a too cosy relationship between the two. The prosperity of Germany, United States, and Japan has been attributed to high levels of trust between business and the state.

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Times of India | 27 May 2021

The events of the past month have been so tragic, so unspeakably ugly that the only rational response was to pretend it wasn’t happening. The raging second wave of the virus revealed not only the governmental ineptitude but also exposed India’s soft underbelly – our heavy bureaucratic system, which wasn’t nimble enough to cope with the crisis.

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Times of India | 25 April 2021

The dreaded second wave of the coronavirus has created a national emergency. You’d think it would have united our republic, but India remains hopelessly divided. A straightforward problem of vaccinating our people becomes the subject of political football. While aam admi scrambles helplessly from hospital to hospital in search of oxygen, a bed, a ventilator, our political parties behave like prehistoric tribes, fighting elections as though they are battles for extinction. They don’t even share a common vocabulary to empathise in this Age of Hatred.

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