>> oecd inset OECD sees FY10 growth flat at 6.1% NewsWire18 New Delhi The Indian economy is likely to grow 6.1% in the current financial year ending March, the same as last y Friday,November 20,2009 00:44 [IST] >> oecd inset OECD sees FY10 growth flat at 6.1% NewsWire18 New Delhi The Indian economy is likely to grow 6.1% in the current financial year ending March, the same as last y Friday,November 20,2009 00:41 [IST] >> 1 star 2 US industrial output growth slows US industrial output rose less than expected in October while wholesale inflation was tame, according to reports on Tuesday th Wednesday,November 18,2009 01:04 [IST] >> Just 5 Kartik Jhaveri, director, Transcend Consulting What do you make of valuations after the recent quarterly results and IIP data? Though the situation is slightly Tuesday,November 17,2009 01:28 [IST] >> NEW WPI Status quo preferable to new WPI S Gangadharan The Centre has acted with unusual speed in effecting the switchover to a monthly measure of inflation with weekly Monday,November 16,2009 00:16 [IST] >> 6Anchor US economy is not really growing A mere $200 bn in stimulus could do little more than slow down the US economic collapse -- and certainly not reverse it Blurb: Tuesday,November 10,2009 13:08 [IST] >> My5 Dinesh Thakkar, CMD, Angel Broking What trend do you see for the markets? There will be sideways movements for the next few months due to the absence of positiv Monday,November 09,2009 00:08 [IST] >> Government changes inflation calculus You must have wondered why inflation numbers released by the government were almost zero, when your expenses were shooting up and you spent more for the same thing than you would have earlier? Tuesday, October 20, 2009 10:58 [IST] >> Vegetable prices rule high though inflation dips After a gap of almost two months, inflation dipped marginally to 0.7 per cent, but there is no respite for people as prices of items of common consumpt Thursday, October 08, 2009 16:27 [IST] >> China's Central bank predicts bad economic days China's central bank warned that its counterparts in developed nations face difficult choices as monetary easing threatens to cause "severe" inflation and exchange-rate volatility. Wednesday, August 05, 2009 17:22 [IST]