Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Tuesday, 21 April 2026

When Courts Ask About MSP

When Courts Ask About MSP

Background: what MSP means to farmers

Minimum Support Price (MSP) is the government-declared floor price at which it promises to buy certain crops from farmers. In practice MSP is both an economic tool and a social safety net: it anchors farm incomes, shapes cropping decisions, and underpins public procurement for food security programs. Over decades, MSP announcements have become a ritual each cropping season — but their adequacy and coverage remain contested.

Why this PIL matters: a short summary

A public-interest litigation (PIL) recently asked the Supreme Court to direct the government to ensure MSPs that allow farmers to cover input costs and earn a reasonable margin. The petition argues that current MSP levels are often below actual cost of cultivation, that procurement outside rice and wheat is minimal, and that trade openings could expose farmers to cheaper imports. The PIL seeks wider procurement across crops, state-specific weightage in cost calculations, and measures to prevent agrarian distress.

The Court’s immediate reaction

The Supreme Court has asked the government and relevant agencies to respond to the PIL. By issuing notices and seeking responses, the Court has not ruled on the merits; instead, it has signalled that the petition raises systemic questions deserving formal input from the executive. The court also noted that decisions on MSP touch on broader economic policy and subsidies — areas that require careful consideration.

What this could mean for farmers, markets and policy

  • For farmers: If the PIL led to directions that raise MSP substantially or expand procurement, many cultivators would gain improved price assurance and possibly higher incomes. That could help reduce distress in regions dependent on single crops.
  • For markets: Larger or more assured procurement would alter market prices, private trade flows, and storage logistics. It could stabilise prices for some crops while increasing fiscal and logistical burdens for the state.
  • For government policy: A legal or judicial nudge on MSP would force a reconciliation between food-security objectives (cheap rations for large populations) and farmers’ income support. The state would need to balance procurement budgets, storage capacity, and the design of targeted subsidies.

Reactions you might expect (voices stitched from typical stakeholder positions)

"Farmers must be paid at least their cost of cultivation. MSP that ignores local realities is not a safety net — it is a mirage," said a farmers' leader.

"Any sustainable MSP policy needs to be grounded in transparent cost accounting and differentiated by state and crop, not a one-size-fits-all number," said an agriculture economist.

"We will respond with the facts, including food-security obligations and fiscal constraints. Policy decisions belong to the elected government," said a government spokesperson.

Legal and constitutional questions raised

  • Justiciability: Courts traditionally steer clear of detailed economic policymaking. The PIL raises the question: can the judiciary direct complex fiscal and procurement policy, or should it confine itself to ensuring that fundamental rights and statutory processes are respected?
  • Federal competence: Agriculture is largely a state subject. Any central direction to fix MSP methodology or compulsory procurement at scale raises federalism concerns and implementation challenges in different states.
  • Rights and remedies: The petition links MSP shortfalls to agrarian distress and even life and liberty claims. If a causal link is judicially accepted, remedies could include directives to improve procurement, data transparency, or even debt relief — each with wide policy consequences.

What happens next

  • The government and agencies will file formal responses detailing their methodology for fixing MSP, procurement patterns, fiscal implications, and steps already taken to protect farmers.
  • The Court may ask for data from the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP), state governments, and procurement agencies to assess the factual matrix.
  • Hearings could lead to recommendations, or the Court might treat the case as a prompt for legislative or executive action rather than issuing direct policy orders.

A note from my earlier work

I have been writing about the tensions in MSP policy and the need for transparency and compromise (for example, in my earlier piece "MSP is a Many Splendored Promise") which argued for clearer rules on guaranteed procurement, state-specific costs, and automated systems to calculate MSPs.MSP is a Many Splendored Promise

Final thought

This PIL and the Court’s decision to seek responses bring long-standing questions about MSP back into public view. The outcome will depend on facts, constitutional boundaries, and political choices. Whatever follows, the underlying challenge remains: how to ensure farmers a fair return while meeting the country’s food-security and fiscal realities.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Hello Candidates :

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A Name's Quiet Power

A Name's Quiet Power

Why a name still matters

When a state education department asks schools and parents to replace nicknames and derogatory entries in registries with "meaningful" alternatives under a campaign like the Saarthak Naam Abhiyan, I read it as more than an administrative exercise. It is a small mirror held up to how we imagine dignity, belonging, and the architecture of identity.

I have long believed that identity — whether shaped by a name, a memory, or the digital traces we leave behind — is a fragile, living thing. Years ago I wrote about the ways we outsource our intimate selves to technology and how a person’s recorded identity can outlive and reshape them (see my essay "Share - Your - Soul").Share - Your - Soul

What the campaign tries to fix

On paper, the idea is simple and humane: children who are listed in school registers under nicknames or terms that carry mockery, caste stigma, or negative connotations should have the option — with parental consent — to adopt names that convey dignity and respect. The initiative aims to:

  • reduce sources of ridicule in classrooms,
  • offer parents curated, culturally-rooted alternatives, and
  • allow schools to update official records so a child’s school identity better supports self‑esteem.

A government directive can make this administrative — updating registers, giving parents choice, and promising voluntary consent. But the reality is messier.

The thorny questions beneath good intentions

Even well-meaning policies bump into social, historical and practical problems:

  • Power and taste: Who decides which names are "meaningful"? There is a risk that curated lists reflect one cultural vocabulary and exclude other lived traditions.
  • Bureaucracy vs. intimacy: A name is intimate. Turning it into a checkbox on a form can feel like an intrusion into family choices.
  • Slippage into cultural policing: Efforts meant to remove ridicule can slide toward standardising identities in ways that erase regional, caste-based, or community-based naming practices.
  • Implementation errors: Large curated lists created quickly often contain mistakes — misclassifications, gender mismatches, and odd or insensitive suggestions that defeat the program’s purpose.
  • The stigma paradox: Telling a child their name is "inappropriate" may unintentionally signal that their family or community is deficient.

What I look for when policy meets identity

If we are to respect both the child and the family, policymakers and educators should treat name-change initiatives as a social conversation rather than a top-down correction. Practical guardrails I would press for include:

  • Absolute voluntariness with time and emotional support for families making the choice.
  • Community consultation so suggested alternatives reflect local cultures and languages rather than a single prescriptive canon.
  • Sensitivity training for teachers and administrators so that name correction is not just administrative but restorative.
  • A transparent appeals process when suggested lists have errors or feel culturally tone-deaf.
  • Measurement of outcomes over time: does a changed registry entry actually reduce stigma and improve a child’s attendance, participation, or confidence?

A wider reflection: names, data and the life we record

My fascination with names is also technological. A school register is a tiny database; it follows a child into portals of identity that last a lifetime. As I have written before, when we digitise memory and personal data, those records begin to act like living artifacts — shaping how others perceive us long after the moment of entry.Share - Your - Soul

That means two things:

  • Fixing hurtful entries is worthwhile because records matter.
  • We must be humble about the permanence we create. Once an official record is changed, the original social context and the reasons for a name may be lost — and with it, family histories and meanings.

An invitation, not a verdict

I welcome efforts that try to protect children from mockery and to build confidence in classrooms. But I worry whenever the state or any institution rushes to substitute one cultural vocabulary for another without listening. Names live at the intersection of love, history, and ridicule — and any attempt to change them should be handled as carefully as a conversation between a parent and a child.

If the exercise is truly voluntary, locally accountable, and accompanied by community dialogue, it can be kind. If it becomes a checklist of corrections from above, it risks replacing one wound with another.

Where we go from here

Policymakers should remember that dignity cannot be engineered solely by lists and forms. It grows in classrooms where children are treated as whole people, in families where histories are honoured, and in communities that give shape to names through stories and care.

As we digitise those stories and lock names into databases, we must also build the social practices that protect the dignity behind every record.

References

  • Coverage of the recent state initiative and its rollout: "A lot's in a name: Rajasthan govt launches drive to change student names if derogatory." (Tribune) A lot's in a name
  • My earlier reflection on identity, data and the outsourcing of the soul: "Share - Your - Soul" Share - Your - Soul

Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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Factory Wages in India

Factory Wages in India

How much does a factory worker earn in India?

I travel mentally between shop floors often—remembering the steady rhythm of machines, the impatience of deadlines and the quiet dignity of people who keep factories running. Over the years I’ve watched numbers move slowly: wages rise, stagnate, and sometimes jump—never as fast as prices. In this piece I want to lay out what a factory worker in India typically earns today, the forces that shape pay, and practical steps workers can take to improve their incomes.

Typical salary ranges (monthly and annual)

  • Informal / unregistered factory work (small workshops, contract labour): roughly ₹8,000–₹15,000 per month (≈ ₹96,000–₹180,000 annually).
  • Formal entry-level floor worker in medium-to-large factories: roughly ₹12,000–₹25,000 per month (≈ ₹144,000–₹300,000 annually).
  • Semi-skilled / machine operators: roughly ₹18,000–₹35,000 per month (≈ ₹216,000–₹420,000 annually).
  • Skilled technicians, lead operators, or experienced permanent staff: roughly ₹25,000–₹60,000 per month (≈ ₹300,000–₹720,000 annually).
  • Supervisors and junior managers: commonly ₹40,000–₹120,000+ per month (≈ ₹480,000–₹1,440,000+ annually).

These are ranges—national-level surveys and the Annual Survey of Industries show averages driven up by supervisors and managerial pay, while many floor workers remain closer to the lower half of these ranges Annual Survey of Industries (ASI) 2023–24 and analysis by sector researchers How much do India’s factory workers earn on average? » CEDA.

Factors that affect pay

  • Location: wages in Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru and other high-cost metros are significantly higher than in smaller towns and many rural areas. State minimum-wage differences are large and matter a lot.
  • Industry: automotive, pharmaceuticals and some chemicals pay better than low-value textiles or informal metal workshops.
  • Skill level & experience: multi-skilled operators and long-tenured staff command premiums.
  • Employment formality: direct hires with PF/ESI/benefits earn more than contract-workers doing identical tasks.
  • Unionization and collective bargaining: where unions are active, base pay and benefits are often better.
  • Shift work and overtime: night shifts and overtime attract allowances; working second/third shifts can raise take-home pay.
  • Education and certifications: vocational courses, apprenticeships and trade certificates increase bargaining power.

Examples by industry (typical ranges for floor workers)

  • Textiles & garments: ₹8,000–₹20,000/month (lower in small towns, higher for skilled machine operators in organised mills).
  • Automotive & auto-parts: ₹12,000–₹30,000/month for assembly-line and machine operators; skilled technicians earn more.
  • Electronics & electricals: ₹12,000–₹30,000/month for assembly and testing roles; clean-room or precision roles pay better.
  • FMCG / food processing: ₹10,000–₹28,000/month depending on packaging, line speed and automation.
  • Steel & basic metals: ₹15,000–₹40,000/month for various shop-floor roles; heavy industries often pay shift allowances.

These ranges reflect both formal wages and the large informal segment; state and firm size matter (corporate plants tend to pay higher). Recent ASI and sectoral analyses show an overall average emolument per worker rising, but with uneven distribution across categories and gender ASI 2023–24.

Minimum wages and state variation

India has a national floor minimum, but states set most wage rates. As a result, monthly statutory minimums for unskilled workers vary substantially—some states or union territories publish unskilled monthly minimums in the ₹8,000–₹18,000 range depending on zone and skill class; Delhi’s notified minimums for unskilled/semi-skilled/skilled categories are illustrative of the upper band Guide to Minimum Wage in India (India-briefing).

Always check the state notification for the exact effective rate—the legal floor, plus a Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) in many states, drives the final monthly number.

Overtime, benefits and formal vs informal sector

  • Overtime: legally overtime is paid at higher rates (often 2x basic/hourly), but compliance varies—formal plants and unionized factories are likelier to follow rules.
  • Benefits in formal jobs: Provident Fund (PF), Employee State Insurance (ESI), paid leave, gratuity, annual bonuses in many organised units.
  • Informal sector: limited or no social security; contract workers often paid less with shaky overtime payment practices.

Cost-of-living context

A ₹20,000 monthly wage goes a lot further in a small industrial town than in Mumbai or Delhi. Rent, transport and food costs can cut disposable income dramatically in metros—making the same nominal wage feel inadequate in cities. That is why many firms in high-cost states or zones pay wages well above the statutory minimum.

Tips for workers to increase earnings

  • Acquire trade-specific certificates or short vocational courses (welding, PLC, CNC, electrician courses).
  • Learn to operate multiple machines—multi-skilling raises value on the shop floor.
  • Take night/rotational shifts or overtime where safe and fairly compensated.
  • Move from contract roles to permanent roles when possible—formal jobs bring benefits and higher long-term pay.
  • Join or engage with worker organizations or local unions to improve bargaining power.
  • Learn basic digital skills (spreadsheet, basic diagnostic apps) increasingly used in modern factories.

Recent trends to watch

  • Automation & robotics: firms automate repetitive tasks—this compresses demand for the lowest-skill roles but raises demand for maintenance and skilled operator roles. I wrote about the automation debate and the trade-off between productivity and jobs some years ago (Robots, Robots Everywhere).
  • Demand & growth: manufacturing employment and average emoluments rose in recent surveys, but wage growth has been uneven; supervisors and white-collar manufacturing staff have seen stronger gains than floor workers ASI 2023–24.
  • Labor law reforms and state minimum-wage updates: frequent state revisions mean workers and managers both must stay informed; some recent revisions pushed statutory minimums higher in many states (see state notifications summarized by independent trackers).

Conclusion

Factory wages in India are not a single number but a spectrum shaped by location, industry, skill, formality and local labour rules. For a large share of floor workers the reality remains modest pay in the lower ranges I described; the pathway to better earnings is clearer today—multi-skilling, formal employment, and practical certifications can move a worker from the lower end of the range toward comfortable middle-income levels. At the same time, automation and changing labour markets make lifelong skills and adaptability essential.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main differences in take-home pay and benefits between contract and permanent factory workers in India?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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When Quotas Meet Politics

When Quotas Meet Politics

First thoughts

I read the recent report where the Prime Minister urged women to press political parties to let the quota-related bills pass without opposition and reminded voters that the long-pending promise of legislative reservation for women should not be postponed again (Times of India). The moment felt both hopeful and fragile — a reminder that good policy still needs social will and democratic muscle to survive the churn of party politics.

Why this matters to me

I've written before about the need for women's presence in decision-making and how delayed reforms become moral debts to half the population (Your Opportunity to Get Heard). The same thread runs through today: representation is not just symbolic. It changes agendas, priorities, and the quality of public conversation.

But the technicalities matter too. Linking a women's reservation to a larger exercise such as delimitation raises genuine questions about timing, trust and perceived winners or losers across states. Political opponents will always marshal procedural and constitutional arguments; supporters will frame it as overdue justice. Both sides can be right about parts of the story, while missing the central moral claim: half the nation is still under-represented.

The paradox of pressure

I find the Prime Minister's appeal to women to 'pressure' parties interesting for two reasons:

  • It acknowledges that democracy is not a passive system. Citizens — especially those who stand to gain — must be active.
  • It also risks instrumentalising women as a political bloc. Asking one demographic to be the engine of consensus can become a substitute for building genuine cross-party trust and transparent design.

So I keep asking: how do we convert righteous public pressure into durable, non-partisan institutions rather than episodic political advantage?

Practical steps I believe would help

  • Clear, independent explanations: A non-partisan commission (with civil society voices) should publish plain-language scenarios showing how seat increases and delimitation will affect each state and assembly. Opacity breeds suspicion.

  • Time-bound guarantees: If the law promises implementation by a specific election year, attach procedural checkpoints and publicly reported progress so it cannot be postponed by political convenience.

  • Local leadership pipelines: Reserve seats are only meaningful if women have the resources, training, and networks to contest and govern effectively. Invest in candidate training, local governance fellowships, and public financing mechanisms targeted at women aspirants.

  • Civil society arbitration: Create an independent ombuds mechanism for disputes arising from delimitation-linked changes so objections focus on facts, not theatre.

A caution and an invitation

Caution: reforms that are rolled out as one-off political spectacles are fragile. If parties believe they gain or lose materially from the way rules are written, the reform will be litigated, stalled, or reversed.

Invitation: If we truly want parity, women’s groups, progressive party leaders, constitutional experts, journalists and citizens must insist on clarity, fairness and checks — and do so loudly enough that obstruction becomes politically costly for the obstructors.

Closing

I am encouraged that the conversation is alive again. But hope without institutions is brittle. Let us push for implementation designs that are transparent, technically sound and built to last — and at the same time, empower real pipelines of women leaders so that reservation is the start of deeper change, not its end.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main constitutional and practical challenges in implementing a women's reservation law tied to delimitation, and how can they be addressed?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Stoves, Sops, and Strategy

Stoves, Sops, and Strategy

I watched the recent industry push for short-term sops with a mix of sympathy and impatience. The news is plain: demand for induction cooktops and small electric cookers has leapt, supply chains are strained, and manufacturers are asking the Centre for time-bound relief — GST cuts, faster component imports, and easier quality approvals — so they can ramp up production quickly (Cooking Appliance Cos May Seek Sops to Boost Production).

As someone who’s been arguing for an accelerated shift to electric and solar cooking for years, I see three linked realities in this moment: the consumer shock of disrupted fuel markets, the structural fragility of appliance supply chains, and a policy window where short-term fixes can be shaped into long-term industrial transformation.

The short-term problem

  • Demand has surged dramatically — retailers are reporting spikes for induction cooktops and kettles that created initial shortages. Manufacturers are, understandably, asking for fast relief on taxes and component rules so they can increase output now.
  • The current regime (18% GST on many small electric cooking appliances and BIS rules that limit some component imports to certified vendors) slows rapid scale-up.
  • Many critical parts are certified vendors in a small group abroad, which means India’s capacity to expand quickly is limited unless imports and certifications are eased temporarily.

If you need more context on the immediate reporting, read the coverage linked above.

Why I’m not satisfied with only temporary sops

Short-term tax cuts or relaxed import norms will help factories run fuller shifts and retailers restock shelves. But they do not address the deeper weakness: India still imports the critical components that make induction controllers, power modules, and efficient heating elements work reliably at scale.

I’ve written before about systemic approaches to electrifying cooking and the role of swappable batteries and distributed retail networks in making electric cooking practical and affordable — see my essays on solar-electric cookers and battery-swapping frameworks (No Solar Cookers yet ? Clear as Daylight ? and A Battery Swapping Policy for Battery-Powered Solar Cookers). These ideas explain why short-term relief must be married to medium- and long-term industrial strategy.

A three-horizon approach I’d push for

  1. Short-term (weeks to months): rapid, targeted relief
  • Temporary GST reduction or a rebate for essential electric cooking appliances to improve affordability and clear inventory bottlenecks.
  • Fast-track, time-bound relaxations for importing specific electronic components with strict traceability and safety checks so factories can airlift parts if needed.
  • A clear, transparent timeline for these relaxations so industry plans capacity rather than gaming the system.
  1. Medium-term (6–24 months): build domestic supplier ecosystems
  • A PLI-style incentive for manufacture of critical power-electronics, induction coils, and semiconductor modules used in cooking appliances. Not every appliance maker should get the same subsidy — focus on upstream components where dependence is highest.
  • Time-bound, simplified BIS certification pathways for new domestic vendors that meet safety standards, with dedicated test labs and accelerated accreditation.
  • Support for capital investment (machinery, test equipment) and skills training so local vendors can meet volume and quality demands.
  1. Long-term (2–7 years): reimagine cooking as a systems challenge
  • Integrate appliance policy with distributed energy solutions: rooftop solar incentives, home battery programs, and swappable-battery ecosystems so cooking electrification reduces LPG import dependence and benefits from renewables.
  • Use carbon-market thinking to reward low-carbon cooking paths (solar + storage + efficient induction). I’ve explored how carbon credits and system thinking could create very different economics for solar-electric cookers in previous posts.
  • Strengthen consumer finance and retail channels (hire-purchase, bundled battery plans through large retail chains) so uptake isn’t constrained by upfront cost.

A few hard trade-offs we must accept

  • Speed vs. sovereignty: airlifting components and temporary imports buys time — but it risks locking in foreign dependencies unless paired with a domestic build-up.
  • Affordability vs. industrial returns: a GST cut helps demand immediately, but without PLI and supply-side investment, we’ll simply import more finished goods rather than create local jobs and capabilities.
  • Safety vs. speed: BIS standards protect consumers. Fast-tracking must not relax safety checks; it should expand testing capacity and temporary reciprocal recognition with strict conditions.

What keeps me optimistic

Policy windows open rarely. When consumers suddenly choose electric alternatives — because LPG shrank or because prices shifted — adoption curves that looked theoretical become real. If policymakers use this momentum to combine short-run demand support with medium-term industrial incentives and long-term systems thinking, India can capture manufacturing value, reduce import bills, and move millions to cleaner kitchens.

I’ve argued for linked battery and solar strategies precisely because they let us think beyond a single appliance and imagine a resilient, lower-carbon cooking ecosystem. The current debate about sops is necessary; my plea is that we design those sops so they seed capability, not just consumption.

If you’re interested in the practical policy levers I’d prioritize first — and how retailers, manufacturers and ministries can coordinate on a 90-day action plan — I can lay that out in a follow-up. For now, I’ll watch as the meeting rooms fill and hope that urgency leads to durable change rather than a temporary patch.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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