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The Telangana Transition: Surprising Truths Hidden in the 2024 Demographic Report

By Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan A State in Flux Telangana is widely celebrated as India’s high-octane economic engine—a landscape of sparkling tech corridors and aggressive industrial expansion. Yet, the newly released SampleRegistration System (SRS) Statistical Report 2024 reveals a starkly different narrative unfolding beneath the surface of its GDP growth. While the state’s skyline suggests a permanent youthfulness, the demographic data points toward a profound, irreversible transition. The state is no longer merely "growing"; it is maturing into a demographic profile that mirrors advanced global economies far more than its domestic peers. This shift presents a fundamental challenge to the current developmental playbook. As we look at these numbers, a critical policy question emerges:  Can a state built for a youthful rural workforce survive a future of urban-dwelling children and a rapidly aging powerhouse generation? The Powerhouse Generation: A Demographic Dividend Pe...
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AI దాహం: జార్జియా నుండి గుజరాత్ వరకు గ్లోబల్ డేటా సెంటర్ వల్ల నీటి వనరులు ఎలా అడుగంటుతున్నాయి

AI దాహం: జార్జియా నుండి గుజరాత్ వరకు గ్లోబల్ డేటా సెంటర్ వల్ల నీటి వనరులు ఎలా అడుగంటుతున్నాయి అట్లాంటా శివార్లలో 2.9 కోట్ల గ్యాలన్ల నీటిని అనుమతి లేకుండా వాడిన వ్యవహారం ఒక తీవ్రమైన వనరుల సంఘర్షణను బయటపెట్టింది — ఇప్పుడు ఆ సమస్య $210 బిలియన్ల పెట్టుబడులతో భారతదేశంలోని అత్యంత నీటి కొరత ఉన్న రాష్ట్రాలకు దిగుమతి అవుతోంది.   చుప్పల నాగేశ్ భూషణ్ అట్లాంటాకు 20 మైళ్ళ దూరంలో ఉన్న అన్నెలీస్ పార్క్ ప్రాంత నివాసులు గత ఏడాది నీటి పీడనం తగ్గిపోవడం గమనించినప్పుడు, స్థానిక అధికారులు తోటలకు నీళ్ళు పెట్టవద్దని సూచించారు. నిజానికి కారణం వర్షాభావం కాదు — 615 ఎకరాల విస్తీర్ణంలో నిర్మించిన "ప్రాజెక్ట్ ఎక్స్‌కాలిబర్" అనే డేటా సెంటర్ క్యాంపస్. ఆ క్యాంపస్‌ను నిర్మించింది Quality Technology Services (QTS) — న్యూయార్క్ ఆధారిత ప్రైవేట్ ఈక్విటీ సంస్థ Blackstone యాజమాన్యంలో ఉన్న కంపెనీ. ఆ సంస్థ ఫేయెట్ కౌంటీ యుటిలిటీకి తెలియకుండా రెండు కనెక్షన్ల ద్వారా దాదాపు 2.9 కోట్ల గ్యాలన్ల నీటిని తీసుకుంది. ఒక కనెక్షన్ అధికారుల అనుమతి లేకుండా ఏర్పాటు చేయబడింది; మరొకటి QTS బిల్లింగ్ ఖాతాకు అనుసంధానించబడలేదు. ఒక స్థానిక...

The Secret Journey of Your Family’s Savings: A Guide to Your Future Career

The Secret Journey of Your Family’s Savings: A Guide to Your Future Career Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan The Bank as a Bridge: Where Your Money Goes When your family puts money into a savings account, it doesn't just sit in a dark vault waiting for you to withdraw it. Instead, the bank acts as a central hub—a bridge that connects people who have extra money with those who need it to accomplish big goals. In a healthy economy, your "savings" are a resource that goes to work the moment they are deposited. However, there is a common misconception that many people fall for. You might think,  "I am not the one paying the national debt back, so why should I care?"  This is the first big mistake. While you might not sign the check to pay the debt, you pay for it with your "lost future"—a lack of high-paying jobs and a stagnating economy. There are three main groups in our country that compete to borrow this money from the banks: The Government:  Both Ce...

The Fuel Price Paradox: Why You’re Paying More While Oil Costs Less

  Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Every time you pull into a petrol station, you aren’t just fueling your vehicle; you are participating in one of the most sophisticated economic extractions in modern history. There is a palpable, justified rage boiling among consumers who see the global cost of raw materials plummet while their own cost of living sky-rockets. The central question is a mathematical nightmare: Why is petrol draining your wallet at over ₹100 per liter today, when the crude oil used to make it is significantly cheaper than it was in 2014? As an advocate for the consumer, it is time to peel back the layers of government policy and expose how a systematic tax trap has been engineered to ensure that while the state coffers swell, the common man is systematically fleeced. The 2014 vs. Today Reality Check: The Raw Material Paradox To understand the sheer scale of this disconnect, we have to look at the hard data. In any honest market, when the cost of a raw material drops,...

The Fuel Price Paradox: Why You’re Paying More While Oil Costs Less

The raw-material paradox: why cheaper crude oil has not meant cheaper petrol A decade of asymmetric taxation, a pandemic windfall captured by the state, and a diluted product sold at full price have combined to leave the Indian motorist paying record amounts for something that should, by any rational reckoning, cost far less Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan hYDERABAD T here is a puzzle at the heart of Indian fuel pricing that deserves more scrutiny than it typically receives. In 2014, crude oil — the raw material from which petrol is refined — traded at $105 per barrel. Indian motorists in Delhi paid ₹72 per litre at the pump. Today, the same crude costs roughly $96 per barrel, a decline of nearly 9%. Yet the same Delhi motorist now pays ₹102 per litre, and the Mumbaikar pays ₹111. The raw material became cheaper. The final product became dramatically more expensive. This is the Indian fuel paradox, and its explanation lies not in the global oil market, but in the domestic architecture of taxat...

India's Economic Pain: Beyond the War

  Structural Cracks in the Indian Economy — A Conversation with Arvind Subramanian India is weathering a painful economic storm. Fuel prices have surged four times in under two weeks, the rupee has slid sharply against the dollar, and airlines are pulling back both international and domestic flights. The government has framed much of this as collateral damage from an external conflict — but former Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian, now a Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, argues that this framing misses the deeper point. In a recent interview on Decoder with anchor Nidhi Razdan, he laid out why India's vulnerabilities are not just a product of geopolitical shock, but of longer-term structural failures that the country has yet to squarely confront. A Crisis That Pre-Dates the War The war has undeniably delivered a severe blow — not just through higher energy costs, but also through rising fertiliser prices, potential declines in Gulf r...