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Lisbeth Salander returns
The late Swedish journalist/author Stieg Larsson was the man behind Lisbeth Salander — the undeniably twisted and talented female protagonist of his “Millennium” trilogy. The second part in the series, The Girl Who Played With Fire, translated from Swedish by Reg Keeland, continues from where the first book left off — asocial heroine Salander once again back to her punch-throwing, expert computer hacking ways that she honed as a former security analyst in Stockholm, spinning yet another edge-of-the-seat crime thriller. Interestingly, Larsson’s father Erland Larsson, while receiving an award for his late son last year, revealed in an interview that the character of Salander seems to have been inspired by his son’s niece Terese, to whom the author had been very close.

Tata Steel sees Rs 2,700-cr loss, to cut some debt
Tata Steel, for a consecutive quarter, has posted a consolidated net loss, of Rs 2,719.8 crore for the quarter ended September, compared with a net profit of Rs 4,703.6 crore in the corresponding quarter last year. Consolidated net sales during the period plunged to Rs 25,269.8 crore from the previous year’s Rs 44,050 crore, down 42.6 per cent.

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AK Bhattacharya: Tracking the Railways
A K Bhattacharya / New Delhi December 22, 2009, 0:02 IST
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No hasty stimulus exit, says FM

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today ruled out an immediate withdrawal of the stimulus packages, but cautioned that too much delay in the exit would widen the fiscal deficit. - Disputes panel may cause a Rs 10,000-cr dent in revenue - India cautions against hasty withdrawal of stimulus packages - 13th Finance Panel report to be reflected in Budget: FM - Economy to grow by 7.5% despite poor agriculture: Rangarajan - 3G auction may start by Feb end or March 1st week - Reforms have reduced poverty, says PM Recalling his interaction with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama earlier this week, Mukherjee said exiting the accommodative stance would not be a correct approach at the moment and the government was trying to strike a right balance between the requirements of the economy and its capacity to bear this level of fiscal deficit. “Fiscal stimulus has led to high fiscal deficit… This cannot be sustained for a longer period… Exit policy may not be the correct approach because in that case if the world economy collapses the depression would be deeper,” Mukherjee said at an award function by Corporation Bank. The finance minister said he has told the Japanese prime minister that countries had spent huge amount of money in stimulus packages to help the economies which has resulted in high fiscal deficit in almost every country and also greater borrowing which have propensity to leave little resources to the private sector. The stimulus packages given by the government in the last one year to help the economy fight the slowdown are projected to widen the fiscal deficit to 6.8 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) this financial year, against 6.2 per cent in 2008-09. The government is targeting a fiscal deficit of 5.5 per cent of GDP in 2010-11 and 4 per cent in 2011-12. The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act required the government to bring down the fiscal deficit to 2.5 per cent of GDP by 2008-09. “We are working with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to ensure that government borrowing does not elbow out private demand,” Mukherjee added. The finance minister also said credit availability was important and it had to be improved. He said some steps have already been taken to address the credit requirements of different sections of the economy. Corporation Bank chairman and managing director JM Garg said credit flow to most sectors had improved and there was abundant liquidity in the system. He said banks might not tinker with the interest rates even if RBI increases the cash reserve ratio or repo rate in its quarterly review of the monetary policy in January.


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