Get Mystery Box with random crypto!

English Group "Only Achievers"

टेलीग्राम चैनल का लोगो englishkendra — English Group "Only Achievers" E
टेलीग्राम चैनल का लोगो englishkendra — English Group "Only Achievers"
चैनल का पता: @englishkendra
श्रेणियाँ: शिक्षा
भाषा: हिंदी
ग्राहकों: 11.73K
चैनल से विवरण

Visit EnglishKendra.com for free study material of English (topic-wise complete study material for Competitive Exams, prepared by experts)
..
..
..
..

Ratings & Reviews

1.33

3 reviews

Reviews can be left only by registered users. All reviews are moderated by admins.

5 stars

0

4 stars

0

3 stars

0

2 stars

1

1 stars

2


नवीनतम संदेश 12

2021-08-09 07:28:18 The Hindu Editorial with Vocab - 9th August

Tightrope walk: On reining in inflation and RBI’s credibility

Governor Shaktikanta Das’s statement accompanying the RBI’s latest policy announcement highlights the bind that monetary authorities find themselves in. While the central bank’s growth supportive actions — maintaining the benchmark interest rate at a decade low, ensuring ample liquidity and an accommodative policy stance — are yet to help engender a meaningful recovery, inflation continues to disquietingly hover around the 6% upper bound of its mandated target. Governor Das acknowledged the RBI’s predicament when he said: “Before the onset of the pandemic, headline inflation and inflationary expectations were well anchored at 4%, the gains from which need to be consolidated and preserved. Stability in inflation rate fosters credibility of the monetary policy framework and augurs well for anchoring inflation expectations. This, in turn, reduces uncertainty for investors... increases external competitiveness and, thus, is growth-promoting.” It is this vital inflation targeting remit that the Monetary Policy Committee has temporarily set aside in the wake of COVID-19 and its brutal impact, while the central bank focuses its efforts on using all available policy tools to simultaneously preserve financial stability and support a durable economic revival. Still, the central bank’s outlook for growth and inflation shows it is cognisant of the ground realities and the limits to its policy options.

Asserting that domestic economic activity has started to recover with the ‘ebbing of the second wave’, the MPC is hopeful of a bounce back in rural demand on the back of agricultural output remaining resilient, coupled with urban consumption recovering as the manufacturing and service sectors rebound with a lag, and as increased vaccinations help release pent-up demand. However, given that underlying conditions are still weak and the Current Situation Index of consumer confidence in its own July survey is still stuck near the all-time low polled in May, the RBI has retained its full-year GDP growth forecast at 9.5%. The fact that it has at the same time lowered the Q2, Q3 and Q4 growth projections it made just two months ago, by between 0.5 and 0.9 percentage points, belies the uncertainty in its outlook. With the monsoon rainfall deficit once again widening to minus 4% as on August 8, latest kharif sowing estimates revealing an almost 23% shortfall and composite PMI data for July showing a persistent contraction in business activity and continuing job losses, it is hard to see either a near-term revival in demand or an easing in inflationary pressures from cereal and edible oil prices. Admitting the price pressures, the RBI has also raised its fiscal-year inflation projection by 60 basis points to 5.7%. Also, with one of the six members of the MPC dissenting and voting against the language of the policy stance, it seems clear the central bank may sooner than later have to bite the bullet and start normalising rates if it wants to avoid undermining its own credibility by delaying steps to rein in inflation.


CREDIT SOURCE :- THE HINDU
-------------------------------------------


1. Bind (N)- a difficult or annoying situation in which you are prevented from acting as you might like

2. Predicament (N)- a difficult, unpleasant, or embarrassing situation. कठिन परिस्थिति

3. Consolidate (V)- to become or to make your position of power firmer or stronger so that is likely to continue

4. Remit (N)- the area that a person or group of people in authority has responsibility for or control over

5. Cognisant (Adj)- having knowledge or awareness.

6. Ebbing (N)- a point or condition of decline. कम होना

7. Resilient (Adj)- tending to recover from or adjust easily to misfortune or change.

8. Lag (N)- a delay between two things happening

9. Pent-Up (Adj)- (of emotions, energy, etc.) unable to be expressed or released.
657 views04:28
ओपन / कमेंट
2021-08-08 04:59:52 The Hindu Vocab

1. Divergence (N)- the situation in which two things become different. भिन्नता

2. Cohort (N)- a group of people with a shared characteristic.

3. Impasse (N)- a situation in which no progress is possible. गतिरोध

4. Pledges (N)- a solemn promise or undertaking.

5. Blockade (N)- an official action that is intended to prevent people or goods from moving from one place to another. अवरोध

6. Averse (Adj)- having a strong dislike of or opposition to something. अनिच्छुक

7. Evangelical (Adj)- of or according to the teaching of the gospel or the Christian religion. ईसाई धर्म प्रचारक

8. Paint A Grim Picture (Phrase)- to describe a situation in a way that shows how bad it is.

9. Unenviable (Adj)- difficult, undesirable, or unpleasant. अवांछनीय

10. Clamp Down (Phrasal Verb)- suppress or prevent something in an oppressive or harsh manner.

Join @Englishkendra for relevant study material of English.

Happy learning!
1.5K views01:59
ओपन / कमेंट
2021-08-06 14:11:43 DOUBLE FILLERS
661 views11:11
ओपन / कमेंट
2021-08-06 05:46:29 The Hindu Editorial - 6th August Not always fair game: On online gambling Good intentions do not always make for good legislation. The Tamil Nadu government’s effort to protect its youth from the temptations of online gambling by amending a colonial…
1.1K viewsedited  02:46
ओपन / कमेंट
2021-08-06 05:45:17 The Hindu Editorial - 6th August

Not always fair game: On online gambling

Good intentions do not always make for good legislation. The Tamil Nadu government’s effort to protect its youth from the temptations of online gambling by amending a colonial gaming law to ban online rummy and poker, has not survived judicial scrutiny. Its amendment to the Tamil Nadu Gaming Act, 1930, has been struck down by the Madras High Court, which found the prohibition unreasonable because it sought to bring even games predominantly of skill under the label of gambling, if there was an element of betting or even prize money or any other stake involved. The State’s intention was acceptable to the extent that it sensed the danger involved in allowing addictive games. However, it erred in failing to make a distinction between games of skill and games of chance, and in seeking to treat as ‘gaming’ anything that involved stakes, contrary to judicial pronouncements circumscribing the term to games that are based on chance. In an audacious move that the court found completely unacceptable, the amending Act sought to “turn the statute on its head” by replacing a section that provided exemption to ‘games of skill’ from its purview with one that said it would apply to even games of skill if played for wager, bet, money or stake. The court rightly found that this would actually render illegal even offline games that were played for prize money. It said, “What was once the exemption or escape provision has now been given the most claustrophobic stranglehold and has the possibility of bringing about the most ridiculous and unwanted results if applied in letter and spirit.”

One of the problems of political populism is that the state takes its paternalistic role too seriously. It assumes that large sections of society require guidance, lest their ideas of freedom lead them to uncharted zones where lack of restraint and self-control land them in debt and penury. Notions of individual freedom and choice tend to be forgotten. Another problem is that the moral element is predominant in such laws, often to the detriment of the reasonableness of their provisions. Some activities are associated with sin more than with commerce, and these are susceptible to the government’s regulatory reach and banning instincts. The court, while understanding the law’s intent, has rightly questioned the lack of proportionality in banning something that could have been regulated. It notes that excessive paternalism could descend into authoritarianism and curb an activity individuals are free to indulge in. It could not sympathise with the State’s contention that online games were invariably open to manipulation and no distinction need be made between games of chance and those of skill. However, it did remember to observe that appropriate legislation regulating betting and gambling activities is still possible, but something that conforms to constitutional propriety.


CREDIT SOURCE :- THE HINDU
-------------------------------------------
1.0K views02:45
ओपन / कमेंट