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Monday, February 23, 2026

Newspaper Summary 230226

 The article titled "Behind consumer durable makers’ quarter to forget" explores a challenging December quarter (Q3) for the industry, where expected gains from GST cuts were offset by several policy and external factors.

Article Overview

Makers of air-conditioners, fans, and refrigerators had anticipated a significant boost following GST reductions, but the December quarter proved difficult. B. Thiagarajan, Managing Director of Bluestar, described it as a "quarter to forget".

Financial Performance (Year-on-Year Growth)

Listed companies in the cooling and appliances sector reported significant drops in profitability and revenue during Q3:

  • LG India (Newly listed): 61.5% drop in profit.
  • Bluestar: 38.6% fall in profit.
  • Voltas: 35.8% fall in profit.
  • Whirlpool India: 9.8% fall in profit.
  • Lloyd Consumer (owned by Havells India): 5.6% decline in revenue.
  • Bajaj Electricals: Reported a loss for the quarter.
  • Crompton Greaves: Reported lower profits.

Key Factors Behind the Downturn

  1. GST Cut Timing: While smart TVs, smart refrigerators, air-conditioners, and washing machines were moved from 28% to 18% GST, this change only took effect in September. This led to subdued buying in Q2 as customers delayed purchases, and the anticipated 9-10% volume growth for ACs did not fully materialize in Q3.
  2. Weak Demand Spillover: Demand has not yet bounced back. Thiagarajan noted that demand related to FMCG—specifically from ice-cream and quick-service restaurant segments—has seen a slow uptick.
  3. Harsh Winter: India experienced a longer winter this year, influenced by La Nina. Although "all-season ACs" with heating features are becoming more common in North India, the extended cold depressed traditional cooling demand.
  4. Rising Input Costs: Copper prices hit new highs after rising approximately 60% over the past 12 months. Additionally, rupee depreciation further pressured margins.
  5. New BEE Star Ratings: Revised star ratings from the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) came into force on January 1, leading to price hikes of 5-10% for cooling appliances.
  6. Corporate Expenses: High promotional expenses and the implementation of new labor codes added to the overall cost burden for companies.

Future Outlook

Despite the "quarter to forget," companies and analysts expect a recovery in the March quarter (Q4):

  • Voltas predicts an uptick starting in February as summer begins in southern states.
  • LG anticipates a strong Q4, which typically accounts for 28% of its annual revenue.
  • Bajaj Electricals and Bluestar also maintain expectations for normalization and strong performance in the coming months.

Note: While these sources provide detailed financial reporting, they are dated February 2026, which may be beyond the current real-world date. I recommend verifying this information against current market data if you are looking for real-time investment advice.


The article "India draws up Plan B for oil as Gulf tensions spike," published on February 23, 2026, details India's contingency efforts to secure its energy needs amid escalating volatility in West Asia.

The Crisis: Rising Tensions and Price Surges

India is exploring alternative import plans as global oil prices surged approximately 7% over three sessions. This spike followed a significant US military build-up in the region and threats from President Donald Trump to bomb Iran. Risks escalated further after Iran partially restricted movement through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for global crude and liquefied natural gas.

India’s Vulnerability

  • High Import Reliance: India imports 90% of its total crude requirements.
  • Strait of Hormuz Dependency: Approximately 1.5 to 2 million barrels of India’s 5.5 million barrels of daily imports pass through this narrow passage.
  • Key Suppliers: These imports primarily originate from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE.

The "Plan B" Contingency Strategy

To ensure energy security, India is pursuing a multi-pronged approach:

  1. Bypassing the Strait of Hormuz: India is looking to secure supplies through two major pipelines built specifically to bypass the strait:
    • Habshan-Fujairah Pipeline (UAE): A 360-km pipeline with a capacity of 1.5 million barrels per day (mbpd) that opens to the Gulf of Oman.
    • East-West Crude Oil Pipeline (Saudi Arabia): A 1,200-km pipeline with a 5 mbpd capacity that offers access to the Red Sea.
  2. Replenishing Reserves: Efforts are underway to build up strategic petroleum reserves (SPRs), which currently hold about 10 days of inventory.
  3. Supplier Diversification: India is expanding its network to include newer geographies such as Africa and Latin America (specifically Brazil, Colombia, Nigeria, and Guyana) to ensure continuous availability, even if in smaller quantities.
  4. Reducing Russian Reliance: India is facing pressure to shift away from Russian oil—previously its top supplier—due to US sanctions on major Russian providers like Rosneft and LUKOIL.

Expert Analysis

Analysts warn that while alternate routes exist, they may only account for a fraction of the total volumes that typically pass through the strait. Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Bank of Baroda, noted that while prices between $70-$80 per barrel are manageable through forward contracts, crossing the $80 mark would raise significant concerns regarding India's current account deficit and increased freight rates.

Kirit Parikh, former Niti Aayog member, emphasized that a prolonged blockade would affect all West Asian suppliers, making alternate pipeline routes through the UAE and Saudi Arabia essential for India’s stability.


Respite for exporters on US tariff, deal talks deferred

India and the US have postponed negotiations on a proposed interim bilateral trade agreement following major legal and policy shifts in Washington. The visit of India’s chief negotiator, originally set for a three-day round of talks beginning 23 February, has been deferred to a later date.

The Shift in US Trade Policy

The postponement stems from the US Supreme Court’s decision to strike down President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs. In response, the US administration invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, imposing a new 15% universal tariff. Under Section 122, the US President can levy a temporary import surcharge for up to 150 days to address serious international financial pressures or balance of payments issues.

Why It Provides "Respite" for Indian Exporters

Despite the deferred talks, the new trade framework is being viewed as a rare window of clarity for Indian exporters.

  • Predictability: The 15% cap applies equally to all competing supplier nations, removing the country-specific tariff differentials and uncertainty that previously distorted pricing.
  • Sectoral Relief: This is particularly significant for labour-intensive sectors such as garments, footwear, leather goods, gems and jewellery, and engineering goods. These sectors, which operate on thin margins, contributed approximately $25.5 billion (30% of total goods exports) to the US in FY25.
  • Contracting Confidence: A predictable 15% ceiling allows buyers and exporters to recalibrate pricing and shipment schedules with greater confidence.

Impact on Indian Export Volume

Experts suggest the shift is materially positive for India's competitive standing:

  • 15% Tariff Bracket: Nearly 55% of India’s exports to the US will face this 15% tariff.
  • Exemptions: Around 40% of exports, including pharmaceuticals, electronics, and petroleum products, remain exempt.
  • Competitive Edge: India’s effective tariff rate in the US is now estimated at roughly 11–13%, which is competitive compared to China and broadly in line with other Asian peers.

While the Supreme Court ruling reset the tariff landscape and provided immediate relief by reducing tariff asymmetry across Asia, market veterans note that long-term uncertainty remains as the US President may still use other legal avenues to re-impose specific tariffs in the future.


Centre prepares to merge tax, financial accounting regimes

ICDS and IndAS follow different principles.

India is preparing to merge its diverging tax and financial reporting frameworks into a unified system, according to people familiar with the discussions. The goal of this move is to dismantle one of corporate India's most cumbersome hurdles by harmonizing the Indian Accounting Standards (IndAS), used for shareholder reporting, with the Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) mandated by tax authorities. If successful, this would represent the most significant structural shift in the nation’s accounting landscape since IndAS was adopted in 2016.

The Core Conflict

The move is significant because these two systems currently follow different principles:

  • IndAS: Aims to capture a company's economic position using fair valuation of assets and liabilities, which is useful for investors.
  • ICDS: Relies more on realised income and verifiable transactions, preferring assets to be shown at their historical cost to reduce volatility in tax computation.

Currently, ICDS limits the flexibility to defer tax to a later year, whereas IndAS recognizes mark-to-market gains or losses.

Benefits of Integration

Experts suggest that integration will provide several key benefits:

  • Single Framework: Companies will no longer need to maintain dual computations—one for financials and one for tax.
  • Lower Compliance Burden: Harmonization will significantly reduce the time and advisory costs spent on reconciliations.
  • Reduced Litigation: Many tax disputes arise from differences between these two standards regarding revenue, exchange gains/losses, and contracts.
  • Predictability: Year-end tax reconciliations and deferred tax computations may become simpler and more predictable.

Implementation and Challenges

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs and the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) are in the process of setting up a committee to integrate the two standards, as announced in the Union Budget for FY27. The plan is for this to be effective from the tax year 2027-28, covering income earned in FY27.

However, challenges remain regarding how the merger will be executed. Ved Jain, former president of the ICAI, noted that amending IndAS may be difficult because it is aligned with International Financial Reporting Standards, which are necessary for Indian companies to remain globally comparable. One proposed solution is to keep IndAS financial statements as they are but embed "tax-specific sections" or rules within the IndAS framework itself. The ultimate benefit to the industry will depend on the extent to which ICDS provisions override existing IndAS concepts.


Europe’s defence market could be opened up to Indian industry

By Nitin Pai

While the transatlantic relationship made the headlines at this month’s Munich Security Conference, many of the European analysts I hung out with were more concerned about whether, how and how quickly Europe could build adequate military capacity to achieve meaningful strategic autonomy. The twin fears of a potential Russian invasion and an American divorce have compelled Europe’s leaders to invest in military capacity, but it presents the EU and its member states with unprecedented structural challenges.

Structural and Demographic Hurdles Europe sees a threat to the Union itself, but has to rely on the military establishments of its member-states to respond to it. Like the Pope, Brussels has practically no divisions under its command. Europe’s armed forces are maintained by individual nation-states and operate under Nato (read American) command. So defence policy, strategy, command, equipment, capacity and procurement are fragmented across the 27 EU states and the UK.

What Europe’s effective rearmament demands—fiscal capacity, a military-industrial base, an innovation ecosystem and a demographic base—is also geographically distributed. Countries that have the money don’t have enough people willing to fight and those with big industries don’t have enough startups. Moreover, Europe’s commitments to social spending and its climate transition work both as budgetary and cultural constraints to rapid rearmament.

The ReArm Europe Package Europe’s leaders got their first wake-up call during Donald Trump’s first term and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In addition to supporting Kyiv with arms and money, they began thinking of European defence. It was in 2025, after Trump’s return to power, that they got serious. Brussels fast-tracked a ReArm Europe package that would make €800 billion available for defence spending over the next five years and encouraged the European Investment Bank to expand lending to defence and security projects.

The ReArm package has two fiscal levers:

  1. National Escape Clause (NEC): Allows each member state to increase defence spending by 1.5% of GDP without violating fiscal rules, generating €650 billion for defence.
  2. Security Action for Europe (SAFE): Essentially a debt instrument; Brussels uses its better credit rating to allow member-states to borrow up to €150 billion from capital markets for rapid procurement.

Strategic Autonomy and Partnerships To discourage the favouring of national champions, SAFE rules require common procurement across two or more countries. To promote strategic autonomy, 65% of the procurement costs must flow to manufacturers in Europe. Partner countries like the UK, Canada, Norway, Japan—and potentially India after the recent signing of the Security and Defence Partnership (SDP) Agreement—can be suppliers. That said, purchase decisions remain in the hands of member-states.

Critics, foremost Bruegel, a European think-tank, point out that these initiatives are inadequate. It has proposed a more ambitious European Defence Mechanism (EDM), a treaty-based instrument that would create a single defence market among members, centralized procurement and collective ownership of defence assets, effectively setting the stage for a unified European military command. It is unclear when European politics will be ready for it.

The Window of Opportunity for India For now, the NEC and SAFE initiatives are in focus. Even if they don’t offer Europe the desired strategic coherence, they have galvanized Europe’s defence industries. This opens up a window of opportunity for India. Today, India is actually rearming Europe’s best path to innovation, cost-reduction and economies of scale. At the margin, India’s startup ecosystem can provide Europe’s defence industries an additional route to innovation, partly making up for what it has lost in the US.

Using global capability centres in India lets European firms focus resources on core military industrial activities. Unit costs of everything from ammunition to aircraft can fall if the Indian armed forces buy the same gear. The SDP, signed alongside the India-EU FTA last month, is a key to unlocking deeper defence industry ties.

Addressing Geopolitical Friction New Delhi and Brussels should prioritize additional pacts that enable Indian firms to participate in Europe’s rearmament. The early harvest can come when, under SAFE, up to 35% of the procurement can be fulfilled by Indian subsidiaries or sub-contractors. Europeans have legitimate concerns over India’s relations with Russia (just as Indians do over Europe’s relations with China). Geopolitical realities are what they are, but practical solutions can be found. One way out would be for New Delhi and Brussels to agree to an intellectual property, supply chain transparency and certification arrangement where Indian firms servicing European defence contracts are firewalled from the few that do business with Russia.

The defence partnership between India and the EU has become a two-way street and its traffic profile will change over time. Amid today’s tumult in world affairs, the potential opening of Europe’s defence market to Indian firms could serve both European and Indian quests for strategic autonomy.


Note: Nitin Pai is co-founder and director of The Takshashila Institution, an independent centre for research and education in public policy.


IDFC First Bank flags ₹590 cr fraud at Chandigarh branch

IDFC First Bank announced on Sunday that it has identified a potential fraud amounting to ₹590 crore at its Chandigarh branch. According to an exchange filing, the issue is confined to a specific group of Haryana government-linked accounts operated through that branch and does not affect other customers. Notably, the fraud amount exceeds the ₹503 crore net profit reported by the lender in Q3FY26.

Discovery of Discrepancies

The matter came to light when a Haryana government department requested to close its account and transfer funds to another bank. During this process, IDFC First Bank observed a discrepancy between the balance mentioned by the entity and the actual balance in the account. Subsequently, starting February 18, other Haryana government entities engaged with the bank, revealing further differences in account balances.

The total amount currently under reconciliation is approximately ₹590 crore. The final impact will be determined following further validation of claims, legal recovery processes, and efforts to mark liens on fraudulent beneficiary accounts at other banks.

Corrective Steps and Investigation

In response to the findings, IDFC First Bank has taken several actions:

  • Suspension: Four suspected officials have been placed under suspension pending the conclusion of an investigation.
  • Board Oversight: The bank’s special committee for monitoring fraud cases met on February 20, 2026, followed by meetings of the Audit Committee and the Board of Directors on February 21.
  • Forensic Audit: The lender is in the process of appointing an external agency to conduct an independent forensic audit.
  • Legal Action: A complaint has been filed with police authorities, and statutory auditors have been informed.
  • Recovery Efforts: Recall requests have been sent to beneficiary banks to lien-mark suspicious accounts.

Government Response

Following the incident, the Haryana government de-empanelled both IDFC First Bank and AU Small Finance Bank from state business with immediate effect. The state's Finance Ministry directed all departments to halt further deposits or investments with these banks and to take immediate action to transfer existing balances and close accounts.

The Ministry noted that certain banks were not adhering to deposit norms. Specifically, despite instructions to place funds in higher-interest fixed or flexible deposits, banks were allegedly retaining funds in savings accounts, resulting in lower returns for the government. Verified instructions have now been issued to ensure all departments strictly monitor compliance with deposit terms.


Will US midterm elections alter balance of power?

By Shyam Venkatesh

A major 6-3 decision by the US Supreme Court on February 20, 2026, ruling that tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were illegal, has set the stage for a significant political shift. In response to the ruling, President Trump imposed a global tariff of 15 per cent under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, citing "large and serious" balance-of-payments deficits. This ruling is viewed as a potential turning point for both parties as they compete for control of the House and the Senate this November.

Political Fallout and the "Cost-of-Living" Crisis

Early polling indicates that 75 per cent of Americans blame these tariffs for increasing the cost of living and a drop in hiring. Democrats intend to project the court's ruling as vindication and may run on a platform of "returning" the roughly $175 billion to $200 billion in illegally collected tariff revenue to small businesses and farmers.

The 15 per cent tariff is set to expire in July 2026, forcing a Congressional vote just as the election cycle intensifies. Vulnerable Republicans in manufacturing states will likely face a difficult choice between supporting the President’s agenda and addressing their constituents' economic concerns.

The Midterms as a Constitutional Check

The US Constitution conceived midterm elections as an instrument of checks and balances. Currently, the GOP controls all three branches of government—executive, judicial, and legislative—with the executive branch testing the limits of its authority. The upcoming elections could significantly alter this balance of power, consequently shifting US foreign and trade policy.

Historically, the president’s party loses an average of 26 seats in the House and four in the Senate during a midterm cycle. Since 2000, 2002 has been the only outlier to this pattern.

House and Senate Forecasts

  • The House: Forecasters suggest that House seat losses strongly correlate with the President’s approval rating, which currently stands at 35 per cent. With disapproval exceeding 50 per cent on key issues like the economy, immigration, and tariffs, it appears likely that Democrats will gain control of the House.
  • The Senate: While a narrow Republican majority (51 or 52 seats) is considered the most likely outcome, a Democratic majority is no longer ruled out. Democrats need 51 seats to take control, and while Republicans have a high "floor" due to the 2024 results in specific states, a potential "Blue Wave" could see Democrats sweep "toss-up" seats.

Socio-Economic Drivers and Imponderables

The election is increasingly defined by a top vs. bottom wealth gap. Approximately 81 per cent of Americans, including 66 per cent of Republicans, believe the wealthy have too much power and influence. Many feel the President’s policies favor the top 1 per cent, who own 50 per cent of the stock market, while the bottom half of the population owns just 1.1 per cent.

Other factors that could upend these forecasts include:

  • Attempts to redistrict state maps to favor specific parties.
  • Moves to nationalize elections or "purge" voter rolls.
  • Proposed bans on mail-in ballots.
  • The controversial suggestion of placing armed guards at polling booths.

Ultimately, the November elections will determine if 2027 brings a predictable path forward or continued volatility.


How sea microbes can protect agri fields

FARMER’S DEEP-SEA FRIENDS. Research focuses on micro-denizens of the deep that can promote plant growth and stress resilience

Today, agriculture faces intense pressure from soil degradation and the climate crisis. Our oceans can serve as a massive laboratory for solutions, with marine biotechnology having the potential to disrupt the fertilizer and pesticide markets. Prof Radhakrishnan Manikkam of the Centre for Drug Discovery and Development at Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology notes that marine microbes, particularly those from the deep sea, hold significant promise.

Adaptation and Innovation

Unlike terrestrial microbes, marine variants like actinobacteria are adapted to survive high salinity, pressure, and temperature extremes, making them ideal for promoting plant growth and crop resilience. One key innovation is the creation of synthetic microbial communities, where compatible strains are "rationally assembled"—for instance, one strain might promote growth while another fights pathogens or counters environmental pollution.

Direct and Indirect Support for Agriculture

Marine microorganisms support agriculture through several natural mechanisms:

  • Natural Biofertilizers: Bacteria like Bacillus subtilis convert atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia for easy plant absorption.
  • Nutrient Availability: Microbes secrete organic acids that solubilize insoluble phosphates and enhance the availability of calcium and magnesium in the soil.
  • Growth Promotion: They produce phytohormones that assist in root development and shoot elongation.
  • Pathogen Protection: Microbes indirectly protect crops by producing siderophores to starve pathogens of iron and secreting enzymes that degrade the cell walls of fungal pests. Strains like Pseudomonas fluorescens have shown success in suppressing diseases such as wheat sheath blight.

Restoring Soil Health

Unlike chemical fertilizers that can harm soil over time, sea microbes work "slow but steady" to restore long-term soil health. M Gomathy, an Associate Professor at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU), highlights that while chemicals can reduce microbial diversity, organic biofertilizers improve soil biological activity and nutrient-use efficiency. Consistent use can reduce chemical fertilizer requirements by 15-30 per cent.

Challenges and Adoption

Despite these benefits, large-scale adoption faces hurdles such as low user awareness and the fact that biofertilizers take longer to show a return on investment—often requiring sustained use over multiple seasons. Currently, adoption is often driven by "progressive and large farmers" or village heads whose success with these agents creates a ripple effect in their communities.

Ongoing Research

Ongoing bio-innovation includes:

  • Yeast-based microbial consortiums developed to enhance rice yields.
  • High-density liquid arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) inoculum, which strengthens overall plant resilience and improves water-use efficiency.

These marine bioprospecting efforts aim to create a more sustainable, microbe-assisted organic farming system, similar to those already practiced for high-value crops in countries like Thailand, China, and Vietnam.


The elephant in the room

CYBER MENACE. Concerns grow as connectivity strains mental wellbeing and cognitive development By KV Kurmanath

With nearly 970 million internet connections and a digital economy projected to contribute over 13 per cent of national income, India’s narrative is largely one of triumphant connectivity. However, a "dark, unhealthy trend" is emerging behind these glowing screens, leading the government to flag a new behavioural crisis: digital addiction.

A Threat to Human Capital

The Economic Survey 2026 has explicitly warned that the "intensely digital environment" is beginning to erode human capital through sleep debt, reduced productivity, and mental health struggles. Doctors and teachers observe that the smartphone has morphed from a mere classroom nuisance into an "existential crisis" affecting health, learning, and development.

Compulsive digital use is linked to anxiety, stress, depression, and sleep disturbances, particularly among students facing academic pressure and exposure to high-stimulus platforms or cyberbullying. The survey noted that the bulk of these victims are in the 15-24 age group.

Global Context and Government Action

India is not alone in this struggle; countries like Australia, France, Spain, and China are taking affirmative actions to protect children from social media and gaming addictions. Furthermore, the World Health Organization (WHO) has officially labelled online gaming addiction as a mental health condition.

At the recent AI Impact Summit 2026, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw stated that the Centre is in discussions with social media platforms regarding restricting access based on age to protect children and address the threat of deepfakes.

The Crisis in Education and Social Interaction

Veteran media educator Shashidhar Nanjundaiah argues that digital and AI technologies compel users to "outsource the learning process," posing a temporary existential crisis for education. He noted that many students now carry only mobile phones to class, though small experiments in banning phones in classrooms have shown an improved ability for students to listen and respond.

Psychologically, the surge in digital addiction is causing a shift from a socially connected culture to one of isolation and loneliness. U Vindhya, a former professor of psychology at TISS, describes excessive use as an impulse control disorder.

Proposed Solutions

Experts suggest several frameworks to mitigate these harms:

  • Social Media First Aid (SMFA): Proposed by Jonathan N. Bertrand, this framework treats digital exposure as a public health priority, equipping users with skills to understand platform architecture and behavioural triggers.
  • Responsible Parental Regulation: Rather than coercive measures, there is a need for responsible oversight by parents.
  • Offline Social Interactions: Community groups and neighbourhood associations should promote face-to-face interactions to foster social cohesion and prevent people from using the internet as a remedy for loneliness.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Tamil Nadu Growth Path

 Below is a trend table and a simple chart of Tamil Nadu’s Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) from 2000 to 2020 at current prices (nominal) based on widely reported historical data (MoSPI and compiled historical series): (Wikipedia)

📊 GSDP of Tamil Nadu (Nominal, Current Prices) — Selected Years

(figures in ₹ lakh crore — 1 lakh crore = 1 trillion)

YearGSDP (₹ lakh crore)
20001.79 L
2005~2.90 L
2010~6.59 L
2015~11.76 L
2018~16.30 L
2019~17.43 L
2020~18.08 L

(Source: Historical state series data from MoSPI / compiled historical tables) (Wikipedia)


📈 Visual Growth Chart: 2000–2020 (Nominal GSDP)

20 ┤                                                 ● 2020: 18.08
   │                                             ●
   │                                         ●
15 ┤                                     ●
   │                                 ●       2018: 16.30
   │                           ●
   │                      ●   2015: 11.76
10 ┤                   ●
   │             ●
   │        ●
   │    ●
 5 ┤
   │
   │
   └┬────────┬────────┬────────┬────────┬────────
   2000     2005     2010     2015     2020

📌 Interpretation

  • Steady long-term expansion: Tamil Nadu’s economy has expanded ten-fold from 2000 to 2020 in nominal terms, reflecting strong industrialisation and diversification. (Wikipedia)

  • 2000–2010 phase: Initial rapid expansion, with GSDP rising from ₹1.79 L to ~₹6.6 L. (Wikipedia)

  • 2010–2020 phase: Continued strong growth in the 2010s, reaching ~₹18.08 L by 2020, even in the face of global slowdown in 2019–20. (Wikipedia)


📊 Notes on Data

  • These figures are at nominal (current) prices and not adjusted for inflation or real growth rates.

  • Base year and reporting conventions for GSDP occasionally change, but the broad trend of sustained expansion remains robust. (Wikipedia)


I

South Korea GDP growth path

 Here’s a comprehensive summary of South Korea’s GDP per capita growth over the past ~60 years, based on historical economic data from international sources such as the World Bank, IMF, and long-term datasets: (Georank)


📈 1. Long-Term Trend (1960 – Present)

Starting Point (1960s)

  • In 1960, South Korea’s nominal GDP per capita was extremely low—only around ~$150–$160 (current USD) as a war-torn, agrarian economy. (Georank)

  • Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, export-led industrialization under state-directed development plans began raising incomes significantly with sustained double-digit per capita growth rates in many years. (Georank)

Rapid Catch-Up (1970s–1990s)

  • Between the early 1970s and late 1980s, GDP per capita increased steadily from the low hundreds to several thousand dollars as manufacturing and heavy industry expanded. (Georank)

  • By 1990, per capita income exceeded ~$6,800 — a nearly 40× increase in ~30 years from the 1960 base. (Georank)

Asian Financial Crisis and Recovery (1997–2000s)

  • During the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis, per capita GDP fell sharply (e.g., ~ $13,000 in 1996 → ~ $8,500 in 1998) but rebounded as the economy restructured. (Georank)

  • Throughout the 2000s, incomes resumed robust growth, crossing $20,000+ by the mid-2000s. (Georank)

Recent Decades (2010s–2020s)

  • By 2010, GDP per capita had risen to around ~$24,000–$26,000. (Georank)

  • Throughout the 2010s, growth continued, albeit at a slower pace than in earlier decades, surpassing $30,000 around 2014–2015. (Georank)

  • 2021 represented a peak year in many international nominal metrics, with income of about $37,500 before post-pandemic volatility. (Georank)

2020s & Recent Performance

  • Recent years have shown slower per capita growth with some year-to-year volatility (COVID impacts, exchange rate effects), but per capita GDP still remains high by global standards — around $35,000–$36,000 in the early 2020s. (Macrotrends)


📊 2. Growth Dynamics

Decadal Growth Characteristics

  • 1960–1980: Exceptionally rapid growth; industrialization drove repeated double-digit gains in GDP per person.

  • 1980–2000: Continued solid growth with intermittent downturns (notably the 1997 crisis).

  • 2000–2010: Strong, more steady expansion as Korea became a globally integrated, advanced economy.

  • 2010–2020: Growth moderates as Korea approaches high-income levels; structural factors (aging demographics, slower productivity growth) dampen per-capita gains.

  • 2020–2025: Growth resumes after pandemic dip but remains modest relative to earlier decades, with occasional contractions in dollar terms due to currency fluctuations and slower global demand. (YCharts)

Annual Growth Rate Trends

  • Annual real per capita growth often exceeded 5–10% in early decades.

  • In the 1990s–2000s, growth rates typically slowed into 2–8% range year-to-year.

  • In recent years (2010s–2020s), year-over-year growth rates narrowed further — often ~1–4% outside major global disruptions. (YCharts)


📌 Summary Numbers (Illustrative Milestones)

YearApprox. Nominal GDP per Capita (USD)
1960~$158 – ~$160
1970~$280 – ~$300
1980~$1,700 – ~$1,800
1990~$6,800
2000~$12,700
2010~$24,000
2015~$30,000
2020~$31,700
2021~$37,500 (peak)
2023~$35,600
2025 (proj.)~$36,000

(Values approximate current USD terms and reflect large long-term growth.)


📌 Key Takeaways

  • Massive long-run catch-up: From a very low base in 1960, South Korea’s GDP per capita increased by two orders of magnitude over ~60+ years. (Georank)

  • Structural change: Transition from a poor, agrarian economy to a diversified industrial and high-technology economy under export-oriented development plans. (vox.com)

  • Growth moderation: As incomes rose to high-income levels, annual per-capita growth slowed relative to earlier decades — typical of mature economies. (YCharts)



Babies born outside of marriage

 


Saturday, February 21, 2026

Newspaper Summary 220226

 

Trump ups tariff to 15%, a day after levying 10% post SC ruling

TARIFF RESET. Commerce Dept studying implications; no change in trade deal with India: Trump Amiti Sen New Delhi

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • US reciprocal tariffs of 18/25% on Indian textiles, leather, etc., invalidated by US Supreme Court
  • A 15% temporary surcharge levied by Trump regime on most imports from Feb 24 for 150 days
  • Certain items exempted such as minerals, some fertilisers and agri, pharma, automobiles
  • Section 232 tariffs of 50% on steel and aluminium remain unchanged
  • Exporters welcome lower tariff but flag uncertainty over Trump’s next steps
  • Trade experts say India must leverage the development to negotiate a better trade deal

The US reciprocal tariffs of 18 per cent on Indian goods, established under the framework India-US interim trade deal, have been invalidated following a Friday ruling by the US Supreme Court striking down President Donald Trump’s “illegal” tariffs. In their place, goods will now be subject to a 15 per cent “world-wide tariff,” Trump posted on his social media platform TruthSocial on Saturday. He raised the tariffs from 10 per cent, which had been imposed as a “temporary” levy on Friday on all imports for a period of 150 days.

Official Reactions

“We have noted the US Supreme Court judgment on tariffs yesterday. President Trump has also addressed a press conference in that regard. Some steps have been announced by the US administration. We are studying all these developments for their implications,” according to a statement from the Commerce Department.

While Indian exporters are relieved by the drop in additional tariffs to 15 per cent, the uncertainty on the steps the Trump administration may take is a point of concern. Ajay Sahai from the exporters’ body FIEO noted that February export numbers have been encouraging following earlier reductions, adding, “A further reduction now should be good for exports. But it is still uncertain how Trump will actually react to the judgment.

Specific Impacts

Trump announced on TruthSocial that he was raising the 10 per cent rate to 15 per cent—the maximum level permitted under Section 122—stating that trading partners had been “ripping off” the US for decades. Effectively, reciprocal tariffs of 25 per cent on Indian labour-intensive goods such as textiles, leather and shrimp, which were to be reduced to 18 per cent under the deal, now face a levy of 15 per cent. However, the Section 232 tariff of 50 per cent on steel and aluminium remain unchanged, as they were not covered by the top court’s ruling.

Improved Leverage

Despite Trump’s assertion that “nothing changes,” trade experts say the ruling strengthens Delhi’s negotiating position in ongoing bilateral talks. Sensitive areas include agriculture market access, digital trade rules, and India’s policy autonomy in dealing with non-market economies.

“There are a lot of issues in the India-US trade agreement that are delicate and have not been agreed to yet. These include market access for cereals and dairy, digital trade, the country’s position on Russian oil and its relationship with China. India must now stay firm on not giving concessions on its sensitivities,” said trade expert Biswajit Dhar.

Future Outlook

Ajay Srivastava of GTRI suggested the ruling should prompt India to re-examine its trade deal with the US. While Trump has indicated he will seek to re-impose similar tariffs under other sections like Section 301 and Section 232, Srivastava noted this would take time due to required new investigations and public justifications. Dhar added that any replacement tariffs Trump works on will likely be product-specific rather than sweeping.


RARE ELEMENTS THAT POWER THE FUTURE

MINE TO MAGNET. With rare earth materials, the real leverage is strategic, not size. Here is a lowdown on the entire ecosystem and what makes them so critical to today’s industrial landscape and for India Kumar Shankar Roy

At the recently-concluded India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, the spotlight was on the machinery behind AI models like ChatGPT and Gemini, typically powered by Nvidia GPUs. However, AI requires physical systems to store data, move parts with precision, and cool power-hungry servers. Rare earth elements (REEs) are critical to these systems, primarily through permanent magnets like neodymium magnets, which power high-efficiency motors for data centre fans, pumps, and compressors. As AI is increasingly embedded in robots and automation, this dependence grows; these same magnets are also essential for EV motors, wind turbines, industrial robots, and defence systems like radar.

Strategic Leverage

While REEs are embedded deep inside modern machinery, global rare earth output is relatively small in tonnage (390,000 tonnes) and market value (less than $7 billion). The real leverage is strategic, driven by heavy concentration. While China dominates mining, its true power lies in processing and separation, where it controls approximately 90 per cent of global capacity, creating a choke point between ore and magnets. Tightened export controls last year demonstrated how quickly supply chains can be disrupted, forcing industries to scramble for supplies.

What They Are

REEs are a group of 17 chemical elements, including 15 closely-related metals called lanthanides (such as neodymium and dysprosium) plus scandium and yttrium. The name "rare" is actually a misnomer; US Energy Secretary Chris Wright notes they are found everywhere, with cerium being as abundant as copper in the Earth's crust. They are considered economically rare because they occur in low concentrations, often just a few grams per tonne of rock, and are chemically difficult and capital-intensive to separate.

Historical Context

REEs were first discovered in Sweden in the late 18th century. For much of the 20th century, the US led production, particularly from the Mountain Pass mine in California, which supplied 70 per cent of global demand until the early 1980s. From the 1980s, under Deng Xiaoping, China invested heavily in both mining and complex chemical processing. Lower costs and state support eventually allowed China to build dominance across the entire supply chain as US production declined.

Decoding the Value Chain

In the rare earth industry, mining gets headlines, but separation is the moat and magnets are the prize. The chain moves from extracting ores to processing them into oxides (REOs), then refining those into metals or alloys to manufacture high-strength permanent magnets. Value increases dramatically at each stage; a tonne of separated neodymium oxide can be worth roughly 3,500 times the value of a tonne of ore. Magnets represent the largest global end-use for rare earths, followed by catalysts and polishing.

Geopolitical Landscape

China currently controls the supply bottleneck, producing 270,000 tonnes compared to the US (51,000 tonnes), Australia (29,000 tonnes), and India (2,900 tonnes). In response, other nations are building alternative supply chains:

  • USA: The Department of Defense has invested hundreds of millions in MP Materials and USA Rare Earth to scale magnet capacity.
  • Japan: Uses state-backed financing to lock in non-China supplies, such as supporting Australia’s Lynas.
  • Europe: Operationalising the EU Critical Raw Materials Act to accelerate permitting and finance for strategic projects.
  • Brazil: Emerging as a key heavy rare-earth source with commercial production starting at Serra Verde in 2024.

India’s Position and Policy

India sits in a paradoxical spot: it holds about 6 per cent of global rare earth reserves (the third-largest at 6.9 million tonnes), yet contributes less than 1 per cent of global mining. India's import dependence for magnets is sharp, bringing in 80 to 90 per cent of materials from China.

Policy response has accelerated with the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) and a ₹7,300-crore Rare Earth Permanent Magnets (REPM) scheme approved in November 2025. India aims to start producing REPM by the end of 2026 in partnership with the private sector. Plans also include establishing "Rare Earth Corridors" in mineral-rich states like Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu. Government-owned Indian Rare Earths Ltd remains the primary producer and is building facilities for samarium-cobalt magnets.

Market Action

India currently has no pure-play, listed rare-earth miner or refiner. Globally, investing in rare earths is a supply-chain bet rather than just a mining bet.

  • Producers: MP Materials (US) and Lynas (Australia) are direct pathways for production outside China.
  • Developers: Names like Arafura and American Rare Earths sit earlier on the curve with higher execution risk.
  • Downstream: Australian Strategic Materials and JL MAG offer exposure to value-added materials and magnets.
  • Incumbents: China-listed names like China Northern Rare Earth and Shenghe represent the existing scale and domestic backbone.

Investors are advised to assess REE stocks by their position in the chain (mine, separation, metals, magnets) and track execution milestones like commissioning progress and unit costs.


AI crushed software’s 23-year outperformance

MARKET WISE. The rout in global software stocks has been a bottomless pit so far while semiconductor stocks have been on a high

Nishanth Gopalakrishnan

As deals around AI and data centres continued to stack up at the AI Impact Summit, the mood elsewhere wasn’t as cheerful. It’s the software sector we are talking about. The rout in global software stocks has been a bottomless pit so far. Software companies apparently face an existential threat from AI. The debate rages on whether the sell-off is overdone or the disruption is serious, an outcome that no one can predict at this point in time.

The Big AI Threat

Though the threat has existed for around two years now and stocks have been on a slump since last year, the recent rout signals the market’s acknowledgement that the threat is real. Stocks of global software bellwethers have fallen anywhere between 15 per cent and 35 per cent over the past 30 days. Accenture and EPAM Systems are among the biggest losers with losses of 25 per cent and 35 per cent respectively. Back home, the Nifty IT index has declined 16 per cent over the same period.

Gauging the Carnage

Ratio charts are used to better gauge the extent of this carnage. Chart 1 represents the price of the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) to the Nasdaq Composite index’s value. IGV, which includes frontline firms like Microsoft, Palantir, Oracle, Salesforce, and Adobe, serves as a proxy for the software sector.

The ratio chart has been re-based to 100 with the base set at the market’s bottom in October 2002, after the dot-com bust. While the ratio stayed above 100 for almost the entire period, it has now returned to 100. This implies that the entire 23-year outperformance of software stocks from the start of the technology bull market in 2002 has been completely undone in a few months. The current drawdown of 37 per cent in this ratio surpasses all other drawdowns over this period, including the 2022 reaction to interest rate tightening.

Making Merry

If there is a sector that is making merry while software stocks are trounced, it is the semiconductor sector. In the ensuing AI gold rush, chip designers (Nvidia), memory chip companies (Micron), foundries (TSMC), and equipment suppliers (ASML, Applied Material) are seen as the "shovel sellers". The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) serves as a proxy for this sector.

The SOXX to Nasdaq Composite ratio is now at an all-time high in the post-dotcom period, resembling an exact mirror image of the IGV ratio chart over the last six months. Meanwhile, the ratio of IGV to SOXX has snowballed into a 70 per cent drawdown, the worst in the post-dotcom period.

Value Trap or Value Buy?

Valuations of all major chip stocks, except Nvidia and AMD, are well above their five-year average multiples. Conversely, valuations of all software stocks are currently below their five-year averages. Given the current exponential disruption, it is not as clear as day and night whether these represent value buys.

Indian Context

In India, the ratio of the Nifty IT index to the Nifty 50 stands at 111 (based on a September 2001 bottom), down from a peak of nearly 200 in late 2021. While multiples are lower than five-year averages, they remain higher than pre-Covid levels in December 2019, when growth was better and there was no threat of AI disruption.

Furthermore, some mid-caps like Tata Elxsi, Tata Technologies, and KPIT Technologies are trading at multiples that are among the highest in the software space globally. Their earnings growth rates do not justify these valuations when global investors remain clueless about the extent of disruption to IT business models.

The AI game is evolving daily, and uncertainty will persist. In this context, caution over aggression would be a better investing approach.


Early retirement plan hits corpus roadblock

FINANCIAL PLANNING. How a middle-aged couple, when their dual income didn’t ensure early retirement, planned for their goals Sridevi V

Deepak and Mrinalini wanted to plan their finances. Deepak, aged 45, wanted to check if he could retire in the next five years due to health reasons. Mrinalini is career-oriented and will continue to work, likely until she is 60—for the next 18 years. They have two children: a daughter, aged 13, and a son, aged 6.

Their Goals

The couple outlined several financial objectives based on current costs:

  • Children’s Education: ₹25 lakh for when they turn 18.
  • Marriage: ₹40 lakh for their daughter and ₹10 lakh for their son, both at age 25.
  • Home Purchase: ₹1.4 crore before retirement.
  • Retirement: Monthly expenses of ₹75,000.
  • School Expenses: ₹4.5 lakh per year for both kids until their son completes schooling, should Deepak retire early.

Financial Status and Lifestyle

Both partners have considerable exposure to market-related investments and have accumulated a balanced portfolio. They do not want to opt for any loans and are comfortable with an upper middle-class lifestyle, which they do not wish to compromise. Deepak also inquired about moving to an aggressive investing style to reach his goals sooner.

Recommendations

  • Emergency Needs: The couple has enough liquidity for emergencies through their fixed income investments.
  • Education and Marriage: It was suggested to allocate ₹64 lakh in MF equity for education and ₹23 lakh (from Sukanya Samriddhi and MFs) for marriage.
  • Early Retirement Roadblock: Because high-priority goals are funded first, it is highly unlikely Deepak can retire at 50 and purchase a house, as the surplus is insufficient for both goals.
  • Revised Strategy: The family needs a ₹4.13 crore corpus by the time Deepak turns 55. They should focus on their home goal by investing ₹1.5 lakh per month for the next five years.
  • Long-term Outlook: This strategy allows Deepak to have his own home and retire at 50, provided Mrinalini continues her career until 60. As long as she works, her income will cover family expenses, allowing the retirement corpus to compound and be available when she eventually retires.

TAKE NOTE It is best to start planning for one’s retirement as early as possible; else, the retirement age may have to be postponed.


Signs of a trend reversal

US MARKET OUTLOOK. Charts indicate absence of fresh buyers Gurumurthy K bl. research bureau

Dow Jones, S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite indices recovered last week and closed in green. The Dow Jones seems to be struggling to get a strong follow-through rise after making a bullish breakout a couple of weeks ago. The S&P 500 seems to be turning down gradually, and the price action in the coming weeks will need a very close watch. The NASDAQ Composite looks much weaker among the lot.

The US Supreme Court striking down the tariffs levied by President Donald Trump has given a push for the equities on Friday, but it remains to be seen if this can sustain.

DOW JONES (49,625.97)

Support is in the 49,200-49,000 region. The Dow has to sustain above this support in order to go up towards 50,700-50,800 in the short term. In case the index breaks below 49,000, a fall to 48,000 is possible. Broadly, 48,000-51,000 can be the wide trading range, and a break below 48,000 will turn the outlook bearish for a fall to 45,000. Conversely, a decisive break above 51,000 is needed to clear the way for a rise to 55,000 and higher.

Considering the lack of strength in the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite, it is better to remain cautious on the Dow Jones rather than being bullish, viewing the market from the sell side rather than making fresh buys.

S&P 500 (6,909.51)

The index has been broadly range-bound between 6,700 and 7,000 since December last year. However, charts indicate that the index is gradually turning down. A fall below 6,770 could be an initial bearish signal, and a subsequent break below 6,700 will confirm the bearish trend reversal. This would increase the danger of seeing 6,600-6,500 and even lower levels. A break above 7,000 and a subsequent rise past 7,100 is needed to negate this fall and open the upside for a rise to 7,400-7,500.

NASDAQ COMPOSITE (22,886.07)

The bounce last week provided some relief, but the view remains negative. The region between 23,000 and 23,300 will be a strong resistance zone that can cap the upside. The index could fall to 21,900 or even 21,600 from here. A strong break above 23,300 is needed to avoid this scenario.

DOLLAR INDEX OUTLOOK

The dollar index (97.79) has been hovering around 97 since the beginning of this month. The trading range so far has been 96.50-98.10. A breakout on either side of this range will determine the next move:

  • Above 98.10: Could take the index higher to 99.50.
  • Below 96.50: Could drag it down to 95.

TREASURY YIELD

The US 10Yr Treasury Yield (4.09 per cent) is holding well above 4 per cent. Cluster supports are in the 4-3.9 per cent region, suggesting the downside could be limited even if the yield falls below 4 per cent. Immediate resistance is around 4.13 per cent; a break above it could take the yield higher.


 

Ireland and the Global Economic Trilemma

 The best way to understand the Irish economy Three paths for Ireland if globalisation fractures STEPHEN KINSELLA JAN 29, 2026

100% written by a human.

Why it matters: Dani Rodrik’s trilemma says you can’t fully have democracy, nation‑state sovereignty and deep globalisation all at once. It is the cleanest model for understanding Ireland’s biggest choices right now. We’ve chosen democracy and globalisation, which has worked brilliantly in a stable world but becomes a bind if the world fractures. Kinsella proposes three ideas for what can be done, noting that policy makers can only "pick two".

A model to fit the moment After a previous suggestion that the book Vandalising Ireland lacked a real model to understand the Irish economy, a commenter asked what model would be suggested. While there are several candidates, the model that fits the moment best is Dani Rodrik’s policy trilemma.

Rodrik’s framework has three constraints: democracy, national sovereignty, and deep economic globalisation cannot be fully achieved simultaneously. Rodrik’s idea includes the "impossible trinity" from macroeconomics: if a government chooses fixed exchange rates and capital mobility, it must give up monetary autonomy. If it wants monetary autonomy and capital mobility, it must use floating exchange rates. If it wants to combine fixed exchange rates with monetary autonomy, it must restrict capital mobility.

In the political trilemma, states can choose only two elements: democracy (mass politics), sovereignty (the nation state), and globalisation (integrated national economies). Ireland has clearly chosen democracy and globalisation, a combination Rodrik calls the "golden straightjacket". Once the rules are set by the requirements of the global economy, the ability of popular groups to influence national economic policy is restricted. To stay integrated, governments must pursue tighter money, smaller government, lower taxes, more flexible labour legislation, and deregulation, making individual ideology subservient to global integration.

This "golden straightjacket" has clear problematic aspects. For example, Donald Trump’s critique of the "Davos set" highlighted how capital offshoring to Asia cost US workers their jobs. Mark Carney also noted in Davos that extreme global integration carries risks, particularly when great powers use economic integration as a weapon, using supply chains and financial infrastructure for coercion. This concept is known as "Weaponised Interdependence". Carney argues states must diversify from their dependence on the US hegemon, a consideration Ireland should take seriously on its own and within the EU.

Highlights of the Model:

  • The Trilemma: You cannot fully achieve democracy, nation‑state sovereignty, and deep globalisation at the same time.
  • Ireland’s Choice: Ireland is in the "golden straightjacket," prioritizing democracy and globalisation. This forces regulatory predictability and legal alignment with supranational regimes like the EU and WTO.
  • Limited Sovereignty: Ireland’s sovereignty over industrial policy, labour markets, and macro stabilisation is limited, though this occurred with the consent of the governed via referendums.

The Fracturing of Globalisation If globalisation falters due to balkanization by great powers, Ireland faces a forced trade-off between preserving democracy and preserving sovereignty. This would result in three stages of effects:

  1. Fiscal and Employment: These are the most obvious first-stage effects.
  2. Institutional: Ireland derives exchange rate credibility from the euro and industrial policy discipline from EU state-aid rules. If globalisation weakens, internalizing these constraints will be hugely costly.
  3. Political Economy: Growth via openness has been the standard since the 1990s. Without it, politics becomes zero-sum, and issues like housing, migration, and regional inequality could harden into identity-linked conflicts, eroding democratic legitimacy.

Three Paths for Policy Makers (Pick Two):

  1. France in the 1970s (Re-sovereignisation): Managed democracy with stronger industrial policy, strategic protection, and tighter migration control. Democracy remains but is constrained by elite coordination.
  2. Australia in the 1990s: Continued openness with democratic strain. Ireland tries to stay integrated by competing harder on tax and regulation, which hollows out democratic choice and is likely unstable.
  3. Economic Diversification (Taking Carney Seriously): Reducing exposure to footloose capital by building indigenous scale firms, deepening EU fiscal capacity, and embedding multinationals locally. This is slow and technically demanding but likely stable if the public buys into it.

Ultimately, if globalisation fragments, the EU becomes the decisive arena. Ireland’s real choice will shift from sovereignty versus democracy to national democracy versus pooled European sovereignty.

Speed can reindustrialize United States

 Speed Can Reindustrialize America Reviving manufacturing doesn't require a planned economy, just a better business model.

Manufacturing and the US Economy

The US manufacturing sector represents approximately 10% of GDP (~$3 trillion), positioning the US as the second-largest manufacturing country in the world. Despite this scale, the sector is often misperceived as a failure, leading to calls for blunt government-directed policies. The core issue is that while the US excels at high-volume manufacturing, it performs poorly in low-volume manufacturing, specifically in producing custom parts with short lead times.

The root cause of this malaise is the high cost of "white collar" labor in the US; these high wages create substantial soft costs that are difficult to spread across few units in low-volume production. Paradoxically, these same high wages generate massive demand for short lead time parts. New end-to-end digitized manufacturers are emerging to solve this by eliminating soft costs and shortening lead times through instant quoting and production-integrated software. This superior value structure will likely lead to industry consolidation into larger, highly productive firms, with AI serving as a major accelerant.

Understanding the Manufacturing Industry Today

Manufacturing existence is driven by three main forces:

  1. Specialization: The complexity of human desires and the infinite knowledge required means no single region can dominate all production.
  2. Economies/Diseconomies of Scale: Most manufacturing eventually hits diseconomies of scale, making it more rational to distribute facilities to minimize transportation and other costs. Only products with very low shipping costs and diminishing returns to scale, like computer chips or phones, move toward global production.
  3. The Gravity Model: Economic transactions decrease rapidly with distance. Consequently, most products are produced near buyers, with richer countries substituting capital for labor due to higher labor costs.

US Manufacturing's Hollowness

US manufacturing is currently tilted toward high-volume, static, and bulky products. Domestic production is strongest in items characterized by:

  • High Transportation Costs: Such as sand, cement, cars, and dishwashers.
  • Need for Speed to Market: Time-sensitive or perishable items.
  • High Volume for Fixed Cost Absorption: Allowing setup and tooling costs to be spread over many units.
  • Long Product Lifecycles: Where static designs allow for long-term automation investment.
  • Technological Complexity: Leading-edge products like stealth fighters, commercial aircraft, and gas turbines.
  • Amenability to Automation: Processes like chemical processing that are easier to mechanize.

The Structure of the US Manufacturing Industry

The industry is organized into layers:

  • Commodities: Raw materials like steel or plastic produced in gargantuan, capital-intensive facilities; the US is largely self-sufficient in these high-volume basics.
  • Intermediates: The "missing middle" consisting of diverse parts like sheet metal, hoses, and clips. This sector contains most of the value-added but is characterized by small, often analog firms with long lead times.
  • Final Products: Integrators who design and organize production; while many parts are imported, most final products by value are assembled in the US.

Case Study: Robot Density in China vs. the US

The rising density of robots in China compared to the US is often misunderstood. Robot arms are labor-shifting, not labor-replacing. They reduce hourly labor but increase the demand for high-cost skilled labor for programming and maintenance. Because the US has a surplus of low-paid hourly workers and a shortage of high-skill workers, this trade-off is often uneconomical. In contrast, China has a surplus of underemployed STEM graduates and faces labor restrictions ("Hukou") for hourly workers, making robots a more attractive investment.

Finding Dynamism in Low-Volume Manufacturing

Modern US firms face increasing fixed costs due to scale, specialization, and high-end labor. To remain productive, firms must either increase volume or reduce time. For startups and firms on the technological frontier, ultra-short lead times are critical because the fixed costs accrued during waiting periods often dwarf the actual price of a part.

Speed Sells and Eliminating Soft Costs

Traditional US manufacturing is often slower than Chinese competitors who mass human resources to create speed. End-to-end digitization can eliminate "dead time" (quoting, emails, queues) by removing humans from the procurement loop, reducing lead times from months to days.

In low-volume orders, the "idiot index" is often enormous—the material cost might be only a few percent, while human labor for quoting and billing accounts for the rest. Software can solve this by autogenerating CAM instructions, billing, and shipping labels. Companies like SendCutSend have proven this model, reaching over $100 million in sales by offering instant quotes and delivery in days.

Factors for Competitive US Manufacturing

  • End-to-End Digitization: Eliminates soft costs and increases equipment utilization from a typical 10-20% to nearly 100%.
  • Lightning Logistics: Modern parcel delivery and future autonomous carriers expand the sales footprint of digitized shops.
  • Collapsing Tooling Lead Time: New processes like laser cutting, 3D printing, and roboforming replace expensive, slow "hard tooling" (molds/dies), allowing for faster prototyping and shorter product cycles.

Competition and Strategy

Digitized firms follow a pattern of gaining competitive advantages through low marginal costs and high fixed cost absorption. This forces consolidation, as manual shops cannot coordinate tightly enough to offer the instant quotes customers now expect. While general SaaS solutions often fail in manufacturing due to the high precision and non-generalizable nature of the work, building proprietary software for a single firm that scales is highly valuable.

Policy and National Security

Policy should prioritize minimizing high-end labor misallocation. Tariffs can hurt demand for intermediates and end-manufacturers, while industrial policies like the CHIPS Act often consume massive amounts of technical talent for potentially obsolete methods. For raw materials with small markets like rare earths, stockpiles are more efficient than forced domestic production. Regulatory speed bumps, such as long approval times for drones or aircraft, also stifle productivity and must be addressed.

National security requires technological supremacy and cycle time rather than just mass production. Historical lessons from the Korean War show that having a massive manufacturing base is a net negative without the technological edge. The US already has the raw capacity for mass production (e.g., steel for thousands of ships), but the true constraint is the talent needed to equip and operate a modern force.

The Future of US Manufacturing

By reducing soft costs and lead times, hardware entrepreneurs can iterate faster, similar to how AWS enabled software startups. This shift toward speed and flexibility will allow the US to remain at the center of the global innovation network and effectively address competition from China.

Appendix: Notable Digitized Firms The author lists several companies embodying these principles, including:

  • SendCutSend / Osh Cut (Sheet metal)
  • Forge Automation (CNC machining)
  • Blitz Panel (Electrical panels)
  • Digital Metal (Cast metal with 3D printed molds)
  • Machina (Roboforming)
  • Hadrian (Digitized defense machining)

Newspaper Summary 210226

 

In 6-3 Ruling, US Supreme Court Strikes Down Trump’s Global Tariffs

The US Supreme Court on Friday struck down President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs that he pursued under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), a 1977 law meant for use in national emergencies. In a 6-3 ruling authored by conservative Chief Justice John Roberts, the court upheld a lower court’s decision that the Republican President’s use of the law exceeded his authority.

Treads on Congressional Power

The court ruled that the administration’s interpretation of the law would intrude on the powers of Congress and violate a legal principle known as the “major questions” doctrine. This doctrine requires executive actions of “vast economic and political significance” to be clearly authorized by Congress. Justice Roberts wrote that “the President must ‘point to clear congressional authorisation’ to justify his extraordinary assertion of the power to impose taris,” adding, “He cannot”.

Joining Justice Roberts in the majority were conservative Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, both of whom Trump appointed during his first term, along with the court's three liberal judges. The three dissenters were conservatives Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh.

Economic and Legal Fallout

Trump leveraged these tariffs as a central economic and foreign policy tool in a global trade war that has alienated partners and caused significant economic uncertainty. The conclusion reached by the court followed a legal challenge by affected businesses and 12 US States, most of them Democratic-governed, against the unilateral imposition of these taxes.

While the tariffs were forecast to generate trillions of dollars over the next decade, economists from the Penn-Wharton Budget Model estimated on Friday that the amount already collected stood at more than $175 billion. Legal experts indicate that this massive sum likely would now need to be refunded.

Administration Response and "Game Two"

Trump called the ruling a “disgrace” and told reporters that his team would have to develop a “game two” plan. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other administration officials stated the US would seek other legal justifications to retain as many tariffs as possible. These include:

  • Statutory provisions for goods that threaten US national security.
  • Retaliatory actions against partners using unfair trade practices.

However, officials noted that none of these alternatives offers the "blunt-force dynamics" or flexibility of IEEPA and may not be able to replicate the full scope of the original tariffs in a timely fashion.

The decision marks a major rejection of one of Trump's most contentious assertions of authority, reaffirming that the US Constitution grants Congress, not the President, the primary authority to levy taxes and tariffs.


Novartis to sell entire 71% stake in listed India arm to ChrysCapital group for ₹1,446 crore

Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG is set to sell its entire 70.68 per cent stake in Novartis India Ltd (NIL) to the ChrysCapital group for ₹1,446 crore. The drug major has entered into an agreement with WaveRise Investments Ltd, ChrysCapital Fund X and Two Infinity Partners to sell the India-listed entity. The transaction is expected to be completed by the third quarter of 2026, subject to certain conditions.

Transaction Details

Novartis has agreed to sell 1,74,50,680 fully paid-up equity shares in Novartis India. The acquisition breakdown is as follows:

  • WaveRise Investments will acquire 1,39,38,382 equity shares (56.45 per cent) at ₹860.64 per share.
  • The second acquirer will buy 25,47,189 equity shares (10.32 per cent) at ₹701.25 per share.
  • The third acquirer will buy 9,65,109 equity shares (3.91 per cent) at ₹701.25 per share.

As mandated by regulations, the acquiring companies have also announced an open offer to pick up the remaining shares in the company.

Strategic Transformation

Upon completion of this share transfer, Novartis will finish its transformation into a pure-play innovative medicines company aligned with its global strategy. This strategy focuses on cardio-renal-metabolic, immunology, neuroscience, and oncology products, with growth identified in the US, China, Germany, and Japan.

Novartis reiterated that this transfer of shareholding in NIL will not impact Novartis Healthcare Private Ltd (NHPL). Novartis will continue its presence in India through NHPL, a wholly owned subsidiary used to bring high-value innovative products into the country.

Historical Context

Novartis was formed in 1996 through the merger of Swiss majors Ciba-Geigy AG and Sandoz AG. While Ciba’s history in India dates back to 1947, NHPL was formed later in 1997. Its current innovative drugs portfolio includes cancer, immunotherapy, and gene therapy products. Details regarding the future of the 40 employees with NIL and the associated branded products currently remain unclear.


India joins US-led Pax Silica to secure chips, critical minerals

India and the US signed the Pax Silica declaration on Tuesday at the India AI Impact Summit, formally marking New Delhi’s entry into a strategic partnership to secure resilient supply chains for semiconductors, artificial intelligence (AI), and critical minerals. Both nations projected the initiative as a move to curtail over-dependence on “one country,” an oblique reference widely presumed to be China.

Securing Supplies

The pact, literally meaning “Peace through Silicon,” was signed by Indian IT Secretary S Krishnan and US Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg, in the presence of Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw and US Ambassador Sergio Gor. Pax Silica was originally launched in December and its current members include:

  • India (latest entrant)
  • United States
  • Australia, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore
  • United Kingdom, Greece, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates

Geopolitical Context

The broader geopolitical subtext of the coalition is aimed at counteracting China’s predominant role in rare earth processing, advanced manufacturing inputs, and the global semiconductor value chain. US Under Secretary Helberg described the commitment as a rejection of “weaponised dependency” in global networks and warned against the threats of “economic coercion and blackmail.” He further underscored concerns regarding infrastructure vulnerabilities, noting that foundations of economic security had been allowed to “drift” for too long.

Strategic Alignment

For India, the move signals a calibrated deepening of technological alignment with the US and its democratic partners. Minister Vaishnaw highlighted India’s expanding capabilities in chip design and its growing pool of skilled technology professionals as major assets for collaborative global value chains under the Pax Silica framework.

US Ambassador Sergio Gor stated that India brings strength to the coalition, remarking, “Peace doesn’t come from hoping adversaries will play fair... Peace comes through strength. India understands this.” Industry leaders, including Google CEO Sundar Pichai, noted that this agreement, alongside recent trade progress, will lay the foundation for a robust and enduring US-India tech partnership.


‘Sovereign AI means building trusted partnerships, not isolation’

Evan Solomon, Canada’s Minister for AI and Digital Innovation, has been a leading advocate for the concept of Sovereign AI. Speaking at the India AI Impact Summit, Solomon outlined a vision for Indo-Canadian cooperation that balances rapid technological adoption with risk mitigation and the preservation of national digital autonomy.

Defining Sovereign AI

Solomon emphasized that sovereignty does not mean isolation; instead, it means having trusted partnerships and options. He defined it as controlling one’s digital destiny, which involves everything from building efficient data centers to owning the intellectual property (IP) of applications.

Canada provides a global alternative to US or Chinese technology through Cohere, one of the world's major large language models. Solomon argued that international alliances are essential to the process of ensuring sovereignty, including collaborative research, education, and creating IP that remains within a nation’s borders.

Strengthening Indo-Canadian Ties

Discussions between Solomon and Indian IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw have resulted in the development of a series of MoUs to map out technological cooperation. Solomon noted that both nations share a common goal: building Sovereign AI stacks to ensure they are not dependent on a single provider or country. He cited Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), which employs nearly 10,000 people in Canada, as a prime example of the deep partnerships required to build these shared technology stacks.

AI Safety and "LawZero"

Safety is a fundamental pillar of sovereignty. To address growing concerns, Solomon highlighted LawZero, an AI system designed specifically to "police" other AI models. Canada has issued a letter of intent to be a primary financial backer of this technology, which was presented at the summit by world-renowned scientist Yoshua Bengio.

While LawZero can identify if an AI is about to perform harmful actions, Solomon clarified that protecting data security and personal privacy remains the responsibility of the government through updated legislation and transparency requirements.

Navigating the Workforce Transition

Addressing the threat of AI-driven job losses, Solomon observed that while history shows technological revolutions eventually create more jobs than they destroy, the current anxiety is real. He stressed that governments must prioritize skills training and education, as those who can effectively use AI will have a significant advantage in a rapidly evolving labor market.


AI is no magic; IT services will be the last mile in agentification: Cognizant

Enterprises are beginning to realise that artificial intelligence is not a magical “pixie dust,” according to Cognizant’s Chief AI Officer Babak Hodjat. Speaking at the India AI Impact Summit, Hodjat emphasized that customization with business processes is the essential key to reaping the actual benefits of AI agents.

Owning the Last Mile

Hodjat argued that IT services companies are uniquely positioned because they “own the last mile” and possess an inside-out understanding of their clients' specific domains. He noted that this contextual knowledge is often the missing piece in the broader ‘agentification’ journey.

To be effective, agents must be designed and defined to model the specific organizations and processes of clients in a trustworthy manner. This requires a rigorous process of tailoring, engineering, and safeguarding. Hodjat stated that Cognizant is "ahead of everyone else" in this regard, supported by significant investments in its AI labs.

Infrastructure and Strategic Partnerships

Cognizant has expanded its research capabilities by opening an India AI Lab in Bengaluru, which complements its existing lab in San Francisco. The company’s research efforts have already yielded results, with its San Francisco facility recently receiving its 61st US patent.

The company is also pursuing win-win partnerships with AI-native startups like Anthropic. While Cognizant empowers its associates to use these models for clients, it also helps these startups become reliable players in the enterprise sector.

Preparing the Workforce

With a majority of its employees based in India, Cognizant is actively preparing its workforce for this technological transition. The company is implementing several initiatives:

  • Specialized Training: Running boot camps, hackathons, and specialized courses in context engineering.
  • Measuring Impact: Internally tracking how AI affects project delivery and its impact on acquiring new clients and increasing productivity.
  • Hiring Freshers: Bringing in large numbers of new graduates who understand and use AI much more naturally.

Hodjat observed a pyramid of attitudes toward AI: skepticism and conservatism at the top, and ‘naivety’ at the lower levels, both of which the company is addressing through targeted training and innovation.

Advancements in Core AI Research

The India AI Lab, which consists of about 30 PhDs, researchers, and engineers, focuses on cutting-edge research grounded in client needs. A major recent breakthrough involves a new way to fine-tune large language models (LLMs) using Evolutionary Strategies instead of Reinforcement Learning. This method is notably less compute-hungry than traditional approaches.

In India, the team is also researching multi-objective reasoning systems—which allow AI to reason for more than one outcome simultaneously—and is collaborating on research with institutions like the IITs.

The Transition Mantra

Hodjat concluded that the primary hurdle in moving from IT services to AI services is managing expectations. He stressed that AI is not magic but rather an engineered design principle. He believes once the industry tapers down the "magic" expectation, the transition will be complete.


Think before scaling up AI data centres

WEIGH THE COSTS. Countries that moved early now see the full cost of those choices. What began as a digital bet has steadily changed grids, water systems, and land use.

By Nishant Sahdev

New Delhi’s invitation to global companies to build AI data centres in India is being read as a confident move, based on the logic that India has the scale and space to host the computational power AI needs. However, countries that jumped early into building large numbers of data centres have learned wallet-bruising lessons. Unlike roads or bridges, AI infrastructure changes and becomes outdated fast, consumes enormous energy, and depends heavily on the changing priorities of private firms. The real constraints are not talent or ideas, but rather steady power, cooling, water, stable grids, and available land.

Lessons from Abroad

A single modern facility can use as much electricity as a small city and requires that supply without pause. In the US, data centres used about 176 terawatt-hours of electricity in 2023, and that share is expected to climb to 10-12 per cent of total demand within a few years. In Northern Virginia, home to the world’s largest cluster, these facilities already consume more than a quarter of the region’s electricity. This has resulted in household electricity bills rising faster than the national average, as grid planning now revolves around the demands of large computing facilities rather than homes or small businesses.

Ireland offers a similar lesson, where data centres accounted for over 20 per cent of the country’s electricity demand by 2022. Water scarcity is another sharp concern; in Oregon, Google’s facilities used nearly 30 per cent of a city’s water during a drought. The overarching lesson is that data centre costs accumulate over time and spread widely, while the early benefits are captured by only a few.

The Dynamics in India

In India, electricity is not a simple commodity but a social bargain where power supply is deeply political, balancing households, farmers, and small businesses. Adding large, always-on data centres reshapes who gets priority. Once facilities are labeled “strategic infrastructure,” their access to power is rarely questioned during heatwaves or grid stress, often shifting adjustment costs—like outages or higher tariffs—to ordinary users.

Furthermore, while India supplies the resources, it does not automatically gain control over the proprietary models and intelligence produced. There is a risk of repeating a pattern from the telecom revolution: India became essential to global platforms without owning them. AI infrastructure risks a deeper level of this mistake, where the "subsidy" provided is not just market access, but India's power, water, and land.

Set the Terms

India still has an advantage: time. It must price its ambitions honestly and treat large data centres as strategic infrastructure rather than routine real estate. Safeguards should include:

  • Transparent and capped power and water costs.
  • Time-bound incentives.
  • Public subsidies tied to domestic capability and ownership of skills, systems, and models.

Setting these terms early will ensure infrastructure builds national strength; delaying them means the costs will still arrive, but without any remaining leverage.

The writer is a Physicist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US


The stray community

Delhi has its share of people who rally against strays, but streeties also have a way of bringing people together.

Across Delhi, like elsewhere in the country, people care for stray dogs in their own little ways.

By Pooja Singh

Raghu is refusing to eat his lunch—a bowl of rice mixed with boiled vegetables. He sniffs it and returns to his spot in a corner of Delhi’s Khan Market. “Chicken nahi hai na aaj (there’s no chicken today),” says Meenakshi Yadav, giving Raghu, a visibly overweight nine-year-old street dog, a gentle slap. A few minutes later, he’s emptied the bowl.

Yadav, who works as a cleaning lady in a shop in Khan Market, travels 30km every day from the outskirts of Delhi to reach her workplace. Alongside her own lunch, she carries food for five stray dogs, including Raghu—all brothers who have lived outside the shop for several years. Mishra, another worker, noted that while he was initially scared of dogs, he and other guards now sit with them at 4pm to share tea and biscuits.

For some street dogs, Delhi can be a welcoming place. Wealthy individuals sometimes provide extensive care, such as Yadav’s boss, who bathes the dogs once a month and pays for regular check-ups. Similarly, those with very little, including people living on the streets, often share what they have to feed strays.

It is a common sight to see packs of dogs hanging around restaurants for scraps or sprawling outside shops as passersby react with affection. Recently, a street dog even sauntered into an India Design Fair preview party and was welcomed with head scratches from the guests.

However, Delhi can also be harsh. Recent Supreme Court discussions have focused on the danger of deadly rabies cases, and some residents have called for the removal of strays from the streets.

Despite the debate, these dogs often bring communities together. In one locality, a woman who feeds strays from her scooter at dawn was recently joined by two neighbours to cover more ground. In Janakpuri, a group of youngsters has organized a care network across 14 residential colonies, washing winter sweaters for the dogs, taking them to the vet, and even setting up resting spots with fans for the summer.

Scattered across the city are these stubborn pockets of care where dogs that belong to no one are still looked after. They provide a reason for people to pause and talk, creating social bonds in the places they are most needed.