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Nothing so euphoric about Sunak from now before the political storm settles down

 

Mobilenews24x7 Bureau

The potential fall outs in Britain are far from over. Although it is difficult to connect to the ground reality in UK nor it is easy for those in England to conjure anything to douse the political firestorm in UK.

Given the feel from London by a cross section of media platforms lead one to believe that it is too early to be so ecstatic over ascendancy of Rishi Sunak to be PM post.

Rather, for any one in his place it would be hard to ameliorate the heath of the blighted economy there and that is the sense one gets.

He is at the threshold of the 10 Downing Street but the reactions over a mandate would haunt his peace for the coming days. After all it’s the demand from two thirds of British population as reports suggest.

But what is happening in a country as ours where mandated regimes leave hazy footprints. A subverted market economy and huge layoffs. Which is a problem more multiplied by job crunch and huge inflation.

When there was a recession and a global economic crisis between 2010-2914 the then government in India did fairly well.

But today, the Indexes reveal India in poor light. Unemployment is increasing and as regards poverty and hunger, India witness a dismal situation.

According to an economist Dr Santosh Kumar Mohapatra, ‘ India’s growth rate estimated for the current financial year is better because of low base”.

But looking back to the pandemic times, India added about 5.6 crore to its poverty, said Mohapatra adding that ‘GDP increases if indirect taxes increase and subsidy is cut down’.

The GDP assessment all over the world faces a question mark when it ensures wealth transfer from poor to rich.

In India it has become a practice to pass on the blames to the predecessors, irrespective of the party that rules.

And critics are less tolerated or muzzled. So, dissent has hardly any space to survive in a very competitive sloganeering politics of the day.

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