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Sudoku puzzle
At the launch of Arvind Virmani’s book on Wednesday, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said he was intrigued by the book’s title, The Sudoku of India’s Growth. He said he’d have thought that his chief economic advisor would not think India’s growth surge was a puzzle and that he would actually know what had driven the growth. Having got everyone laughing, Mukherjee said that though he had not read the book in any great detail, his interaction with Virmani had convinced him that though the growth may have puzzled many, Virmani actually had the key to the puzzle. Suman Bery of NCAER said meanwhile that the appropriate metaphor was not Sudoku but Rubik’s Cube.

Spice exports at all-time high of Rs 5,300 crore
Spice exports from India were valued at over $11 billion — an all-time high — in 2008-09.

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Slowdown hits remittances, says Western Union

With the impact of global slowdown still persisting across countries, there may be a dip in remittances inflow into the country in 2009, according to Rajesh Mehta, director marketing – South and South East Asia, Western Union Services India. - "Skyrocketing prices of gold not a welcome sign" - Rajesh Exports to chalk out new retail strategy There has been an almost 13 per cent dip in remittances inflow into the country, at $22.8 billion during the first half (January-June) of 2009, against $26.2 billion during the same period last year, said Mehta. Last year, India was the largest recipient of remittances at $50 billion. “This year, we are anticipating a slight slowdown, which is already visible so far during the first half of this year,” he said. Total inward remittances during the January-March 2009 was at $9.5 billion, against $14 billion same period 2008. In April-June 2009, it stood at $13 billion, against $12.2 billion last year same time, according to the Reserve Bank of India data. Western Union registered a 16 per cent growth in volumes, and eight per cent growth in revenues during the first half of calendar year 2009, said Mehta. Remittances from the Gulf, a major source of inward remittances to India , dropped due to the slowdown in the construction sector, he said. While there has been a slowdown in remittances from the Gulf countries, remittances to India have increased from countries like Malaysia, Singapore, Australia and parts of Europe and Africa. “We constantly keep monitoring the various corridors to understand the migration and remittances trend. Though there has been a significant slowdown in remittances from the Gulf, the losses from that corridor have been offset by various other markets such as Malaysia, Singapore, Australia and parts of Europe and Africa,” he said.


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