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Non-teaching IIT staff protest pay anomalies
Over 12,000 non-teaching staff of the seven Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) went on a day-long dharna today to protest anomalies in pay and promotion structure. The employees — technical staff, laboratory staff and office assistants — however, did not boycott work.

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Jai Arjun Singh / New Delhi October 10, 2009, 0:51 IST

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Dainik Bhaskar, Travel Channel get FIPB nod
A proposal from the Dainik Bhaskar media group to allow more foreign equity in it and another one from Travel Channel International, UK, for setting up an Indian subsidiary, have been approved by the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB).
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Where are interest rates headed?

Shikha Sharma MD & CEO, Axis Bank Jan cement sales in high double-digit It is very tough to predict what the interest rate scenario will be like. Right now, there is plenty of liquidity and credit growth is slow. So, there is no natural pressure on interest rates. However, if there is regulatory action and liquidity is sucked out, and credit growth picks up, as we believe it will next year, we could see a rise in interest rates. So, the key factors are regulatory action and credit growth. KR Kamath CMD, Punjab National Bank Interest rates are expected to remain stable in the early part of 2010. There is ample liquidity in the system. Rising inflation, which emanates from supply side, is a concern. Though monetary policy has limited scope in tackling this aspect of price rise, the Reserve Bank of India will not watch from the sidelines. It will initiate steps to manage inflationary expectations in the economy. Romesh Sobti MD & CEO, IndusInd Bank The upturn in the interest rate cycle is underway since June 2009 on higher growth momentum, supply-side inflationary pressures driven by poor monsoon and higher market borrowing. There is no reason to panic on the hawkish stance on liquidity and interest rates as long as the economic upturn remains intact. Keki Mistry VC & MD, HDFC The price of money is after all a function of demand and supply. With inflation moving up, RBI may look to tighten the monetary policy sooner or later. However, this may not immediately result in a sharp increase in interest rates on account of the huge liquidity that currently exists. We will probably start seeing higher interest rates only after there is a significant increase in corporate credit off-take.


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