Posted: 31 May 2007 00:28
It is certainly true that the increase in height is not restricted to the urban yuppie crowd. I've seen it all around the place, not just the major metros. Girls used to generally top out at 5'3 ish but now many go past 5'6" or beyond. Same for guys - 5'8 to 5'9" is going from clearly above average to just past average. It is not just genetics at play, because the increase is broadbased; they are getting much more protein and calcium. Lankiness can be dealt with through additional protein intake and exercise, but the base is there.
Getting back to the thread subject, Business Standard analyzes the NAtional Development Council meeting and the Rs.25000 cr ($6.2 billion) farm investment plan:
A long haul
Getting back to the thread subject, Business Standard analyzes the NAtional Development Council meeting and the Rs.25000 cr ($6.2 billion) farm investment plan:
A long haul
The fresh Central assistance of a headline-hitting Rs 25,000 crore is subject to two crucial provisions, both of which will require time to be put in place. The first and more critical one pertains to the ratio in which to share the additional funding cost between the Centre and states. This has been left to be worked out later. Indeed, going by the plea made at the meeting by the Bihar chief minister, that the Centre should put in Rs 9 for every rupee spent by a state, this issue is unlikely to be sorted out soon and to the states’ satisfaction. The second rider pertains to the preparation by the states of district-wise agricultural development plans. This, again, is going to take time, especially in the laggard states where it is needed the most and where the potential for quick growth exists.
There is no denying the fact that agriculture needs fresh investment for its revival. While in the early 1980s, over 4 per cent of agricultural GDP went into this sector as public investment, leading to high growth, this figure dropped to under 2 per cent by the mid-2000s. Though private investment has taken up some of the slack, it has gone largely into relatively high-value produce such as livestock, fisheries, poultry, horticulture and the like—all of which are more lucrative, leading to the relative neglect of an area like foodgrains. It is only to be expected then that all the newer sectors have been showing robust growth while the foodgrain sector, including cereals, pulses and edible oils, has been stagnating.