Tuesday, June 1, 2010

the world's big banks running? My answer is, not one cent.

Already dearer, gold is set to appreciate in the aftermath of the Greek debacle, says Mohit Satyanand..

How much are you willing to spend to keep the world's big banks running? My answer is, not one cent.

Not that it matters what I think! On May 9, Europe's financial leaders met for 14 hours, and decided they would pledge $1 trillion to the cause of big banking. That's not actually what they said, but I think that's what they meant.

Earlier, the chancellor of the Eurozone's largest economy, Germany [ Images ], had steadily maintained that she did not think it right that her taxpayers should support Greece through its financial crisis.

She was probably right in stating that the laws of the EU did not allow it. More relevant, she did not think that her people would support it. If she had stuck to her guns, her party might have done better in a German regional election in early May; in the event, however, she suffered a severe political setback.

So why did she change her mind? I guess someone showed her the balance sheets of German banks and she discovered that they owned billions of dollars of Greek bonds.

By the time she began to back an EU rescue package for Greece, prices of bonds of other southern European nations had begun to plummet as well -- especially Portugal, but also Spain and Italy [ Images ]. The risk to the balance sheets of German banks was mounting by the hour.

What was true for German banks was even more true of French banks. Which is why news of the trillion-dollar bailout for Europe had the leading French stock index jump 10 per cent on Monday, 10 May. It also explains why -- with the banks of Europe's two largest economies at risk -- European governments were so quick to jump to the defence of its financial system.

The events of May 9 mirrored what happened several times in the US during the financial crisis in 2008: markets dive towards the end of the week; government types meet over the weekend; and pledge hundreds of billions of dollars in aid.

The underlying issue, though, has not been addressed -- too much debt. Whether it be the US or Greece, Portugal or Ireland, nations that have seen a financial crisis are those that have taken on too much debt.

Debt can be extremely tempting when interest rates are low. But if the debtors use the fresh borrowings imprudently, to support unproductive expenditure, outstandings increase, creditors start getting fidgety, and interest rates go up. This further burdens expenses, which means more borrowings. A truly vicious circle.

When this happens, the borrower's currency also sees huge weakness (which is a necessary part of the correction, as it can lead to greater exports and economic growth).

Thus, the euro is at a new low against the dollar. And against gold. Or to say the same thing the other way around, gold is at a new high against the euro.

It is also close to a new high against the dollar. And the pound.

And in rupee terms? At this point in time, the rupee is quite strong. But that is only because capital flows are still buoyant worldwide. In the financial year ending March 31, 2010, India [ Images ] saw capital inflows of $65 billion, which more than compensated for the $53 billion we were short on trade in goods and services.

In 2008, liquidity had reversed, and we saw the rupee plummet to over Rs 51 per dollar. At that time, our trade deficit was much lower. If liquidity reverses again, the drop in the rupee could be a lot sharper.

The probability of this happening is on the rise. I'm telling -- make that forcing -- everyone I know to buy more gold.

Expanded US-Indian defence cooperation, unimaginable not so long ago, is a valuable

Hours ahead of the arrival of External Affairs Minister S M Krishna [ Images ], a top US diplomat on Wednesday said the upcoming Indo-US Strategic Dialogue has elevated India [ Images ] to the rank of America's top global partner.

"Our Strategic Dialogue this week elevates India to the rank of our most important global partners, allowing us to discuss and coordinate policies of global import, including on the future shape of the international economic system and on what we can do together to promote human development in other parts of the world," Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns, said at the Council on Foreign Relations a Washington, based think tank.

"Prime Minister Manmohan Singh [ Images ] is one of President Obama's [ Images ] most valued partners in the G20, and the United States strongly supported the recent expansion of India's World Bank voting share. Secretary Geithner travelled to New Delhi [ Images ] in April explicitly to consult on global stimulus plans, another clear indication of India's economic prominence," he said in his remarks on rise of India. Burn's said India's leadership, and the potential for US-Indian partnership, extends well beyond Asia.

"India's role in promoting global security is growing. India is today one of the largest troop contributors to UN peacekeeping operations, building on a rich tradition of Indian military contributions, including in World War II. The Indian navy is a leading player in counter-piracy operations off the Horn of Africa, and it is a striking fact that the US military now holds more bilateral military exercises every year with India than any other nation," he argued.

Expanded US-Indian defence cooperation, unimaginable not so long ago, is a valuable means of supporting our shared interest in India's broadened international security role.

Our stake in India's defence modernisation is real and increasing, and defence trade has taken off since our 2005 framework agreement, he said.

"Two American companies are among the leading competitors today for a USD 10 billion sale of 126 advanced fighter aircraft to the Indian Air Force, currently the world's biggest defence tender. Timely completion of several key foundational agreements, such as a basic logistics supply accord, will open the door to greater bilateral cooperation," Burns said.

Building on the success of the civil nuclear agreement, India is contributing constructively to global nonproliferation and nuclear security efforts.

For major or intermediate powers such as the USA, China, Russia, India and Brazil, military spending represents

World military spending soars in spite of recession


 US F-18 jet fighter Military spending rose across the world last year

At a time when governments across the world have been borrowing heavily in order to spend, it seems the defence industry has benefited more than most.

Worldwide military expenditure reached $1,531bn (£1bn) last year, a 5.9% rise in real terms from 2008, according to Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri).

But growth in defence spending is not a new phenomena.

Last year, whilst deficits ballooned in many countries, the world spent almost 50% more on arms and military operations than they did in 2000, Sipri's yearbook reveals.

Strategic choice

Top 10 military spenders 2009

F-18
  • USA $661bn
  • China $100bn (Sipri estimate)
  • France $64bn
  • UK $58bn
  • Russia $53bn
  • Japan $52bn
  • Germany $46bn
  • Saudi Arabia $41bn
  • India $36bn
  • Italy $36bn

Source: Sipri

Rather than curbing spending on arms, it seems many governments have deemed it dangerous to risk job cuts in the defence sector at a time of recession.

"Many countries were increasing public spending generally in 2009, as a way of boosting demand to combat the recession," according to Sam Perlo-Freeman, head of the military expenditure project at Sipri.

"Although military spending wasn't usually a major part of the economic stimulus packages, it wasn't cut either."

"For major or intermediate powers such as the USA, China, Russia, India and Brazil, military spending represents a long-term strategic choice which they are willing to make even in hard economic times."

Smaller countries in central and eastern Europe, meanwhile, cut military spending in line with severe budget cuts across the board as they struggled to reduce their large deficits.

Big spenders Canadian Leopard 2 tanks south-west of Kandahar City, 15 May  2010. Military budgets might be reduced in the future

The US remains the biggest spender, accounting for some 54% of the total after having increased its military spending by $47bn in real terms, Sipri said.

Since 2000, the US has increased military spending by 63% in real terms, according to Sipri.

Other large countries, both developing and developed, also raised military spending last year, Sipri found.

But spending rose at a much faster rate in Asia and by islands in the Pacific Ocean, where the rate of growth was 8.4%.

And when measured as a proportion of GDP, military expenditure is greater in the Middle East than anywhere else in the world.

Looking ahead, the global aerospace and defence industry could find itself under pressure, however.

"The industry continues to be challenged by moderating defence budgets," according to Deloitte, a consultancy.

The US government has begun criminal and civil investigations into the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, Attorney General Eric Holder has announced.

Gulf oil spill: US begins criminal investigations

Contract workers collect oil near Venice, Louisiana Workers are attempting to clean up oil from Louisiana's vulnerable marshland

The US government has begun criminal and civil investigations into the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, Attorney General Eric Holder has announced.

He would not say which companies or individuals were being targeted.

Earlier, BP launched a new attempt to try to contain the spill from its well using undersea robots to cut off the fractured pipe and seal it with a cap.

BP said the spill - the largest in US history - might be capped within 24 hours, but success was not guaranteed.

BP's shares fell sharply on Tuesday following the failure of its previous efforts to "top kill" the leak by pumping mud into the well.

At one stage the share price hit its lowest level for 15 months, as stock markets digested the news that the US was "prepared for the worst scenario" that the leak might not be stopped before August.

'Forceful response'

Announcing the criminal investigations, Mr Holder said: "We will closely examine the actions of those involved in the spill.

PAST ATTEMPTS TO STEM OIL SPILL

BP contract workers rotate an absorbent boom to clean up the marsh  west of Lake Felicity near Cocodrie, Louisiana
  • Oil booms - partly successful
  • Controlled burning - causes serious air pollution
  • Dispersant used - scientists warn it may kill marine life
  • Huge dome placed over leak - became blocked by ice crystals
  • Mile-long tube - fails to suck up large amount of oil
  • "Top-kill" method to pump in heavy mud - abandoned

"If we find evidence of illegal behaviour, we will be extremely forceful in our response."

Mr Holder, who was on his first visit to the affected region, said the companies involved had already been ordered to preserve their records.

"We will ensure that every cent, every cent of taxpayer money, will be repaid and that damage to the environment and wildlife will be reimbursed," he said.

Reuters news agency quoted BP as saying in a statement that it would "co-operate with any inquiry that the Department of Justice undertakes".

Speaking in Washington on Tuesday, President Barack Obama described the leak as "the greatest environmental disaster of its kind in our history" and pledged to bring those responsible to justice.

He said it was time to take a comprehensive look at how the oil industry operated and how US government agencies oversaw their operations.

Other companies involved with the Deepwater Horizon rig, which exploded on 20 April with the loss of 11 lives, include rig operator Transocean and oil services companies Halliburton and Cameron International.

Cautious note

In the latest attempt to fit a containment cap, remote-controlled robots on the seabed are cutting the damaged well riser in order to cap it and pipe the leaking oil to the surface.

Video grab shows leaking BP wellhead BP plans to use underwater robots to cut a damaged pipe and lower a cap

Chief operating officer Doug Suttles said: "If everything goes well, within the next 24 hours we could have this contained."

But, striking a note of caution, he stressed that success was not guaranteed and urged people to "remember this is being done in 5,000 ft of water, and very small issues take a long time to fix".

BP says the procedure will take all week and it does not expect that cutting the riser will allow significantly more oil to escape.

But government scientists suggest the procedure could release up to 20% more oil initially and the White House says it does not believe BP has been forthcoming about the risks, the BBC's Richard Lister reports from Washington.

Previous attempts by BP to stem the flow of oil have all failed.

Meanwhile, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warned that winds forecast later this week could move the spill towards the Mississippi and Alabama coasts, which have been less badly affected than Louisiana's shores.

An oil sheen has been seen about nine miles (14.5km) off the coast of Florida, with officials warning it could reach Pensacola Beach by Wednesday, the Associated Press news agency reports.

Tuesday also marked the start of the hurricane season, with NOAA predicting up to 14 hurricanes, of which between three to seven will be "major" tempests, packing winds in excess of 110 mph.

At least 20 million gallons (76 million litres) have now spilled into the Gulf, affecting more than 70 miles (110km) of Louisiana's coastline.

BP has spent more than $940m (£645m) so far in trying to contain the disaster.


West Bengal have Reliance investments

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Do trade and investments in West Bengal have a bleak future? Have appalling rise in Maoist insurgency, incessant strikes and political disturbance severely told upon the state's economy?

Those who harbour such notions need a rethink.

For, a recent study conducted by the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India indicates that the state's business confidence index is at a more-than-satisfactory 6.5 on a scale of 10.

This sends out a clear signal that India Inc still has a lot of faith left in West Bengal's economic and industrial stance.

"The policies are working in the right direction to make Bengal's industrial prospects conducive," Assocham secretary general D S Rawat said.



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The Assocham conducted the study among 280 chief executive officers and managing directors.

According to the study, over 225 respondents opined that the state can be rated on par with favourite investment destinations like Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh.

Over 200 CEOs observe that apart from domestic investment, Bengal can attract investment from overseas players in clean energy, biotech and nanotechnology, healthcare, education and infrastructure.

As per the Assocham estimates, Bengal received investments up to Rs 5.3 lakh crore (Rs 5.3 trillion) till September 2009 over a 12-year period.


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What has been the Bengal's USP?

  • 70% of the respondents feel that the state owes its high business confidence index to its 9% gross domestic product growth rate in the last 6 years;
  • 64% of the respondents are happy with the development of IT and ITEs in Bengal;
  • 52% feel that the state's benefits lie in its cheap and skilled manpower and low cost of living;
  • 190 of the CEOs are for setting up an investment promotion cell in the state;
  • 55% want more opportunities in agriculture, food processing, chemicals, petroleum and downstream industries, iron and steel and power.

In the first five years of his tenure, Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadev Bhattacharjee focussed on the IT sector. He got Wipro and hoped for Infosys, while TCS expanded.

In fact, Wipro boss Azim Premji thought he was the best chief minister.

There were quite a few other success stories as well. JSW Steel's 10 million tonne steel project is probably the only mega steel project to have the land, mines and all clearances, including special economic zone status.

Bhattacharjee also recently stepped in to allocate land to Wipro and Infosys. Both the companies were earlier offered land at an IT township called Kolkata Links located near a spa resort called Vedic Village which erupted in controversy, involving the state government as well.

Why did the Bengal chief minister woo the IT sector? The idea was that IT firms primarily hired white collar employees who are not given to unionism.

Since there is no dearth of highly skilled manpower in the state, given its tradition of stressing on the importance of education, finding the right people has been easy for the IT companies


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Investments in Bengal: Recent rays of hope

According to a recent report in The Economic Times, Adhunik Corporation, which is planning to set up an integrated steel plant in West Bengal, has been provided 505 acres at Raghunathpur in Purulia district.

  • Adhunik Corporation's project involves setting up a steel plant with a capacity of 1.1 million tonnes per annum (tpa) along with a 1,000 mw captive power plant and a 1 million cement plant at Raghunathpur.
  • Infosys Technologies plans to set up special economic zone in West Bengal. The West Bengal government has recently pledged 50 acres of land to Infosys in New Town on the northeastern fringes of Kolkata.

In Kolkata, Infosys had planned to invest Rs 500 crore (Rs 5 billion) to set up a development centre in 2004, housing 5,000 people.

The project got delayed and in June 2009 an IT township project in Salt Lake, Kolkata was scrapped by the West Bengal government following a controversy.

However, in September the state government offered 45 acres each to Infosys and Wipro to set up development centres.

  • India's state-owned Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers, Kolkata, is to double its capacity in the next 12 months at a cost of $87 million.
  • Demand for space in the newly constructed high-on-amenity office buildings in Kolkata is on the rise. This is because companies, located in the age-old buildings in core business districts now prefer to set up new facilities in buildings having high levels of safety infrastructure.

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Realty market too looks upbeat

A recent CRISIL research city realty report provided comprehensive information and analysis of more than 400 areas across 88 micro markets in 10 cities, including Kolkata.

Sudhir Nair, head, CRISIL research, said, "Accelerated growth of Indian economy, recovery of global economy, improved liquidity and expected fall in interest rates are key factors that will signal demand revival in the residential segment.

"This segment is likely to see a much faster revival due to strong underlying demand for housing and supply coming at attractive price points."

"Demand in the commercial and retail segment is likely to remain under stress for the next two years owing to excess supply and weak offtake.


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Why Bengal is being termed a land of opportunities?

Of late, investments have started flowing into the state, businesses have taken off and economic condition of the state has registered signs of improvement.

Some of the key factors that brought in these changes are:

  • Over the past 10 years, West Bengal's real estate market has undergone an astonishing transformation. The changes represent great challenges and unprecedented opportunities. Kolkata's intrepid skyline says it all.
  • Siliguri, gateway to the North East is driven by four 'T's. Tea, timber, tourism and transport are attracting investments.
  • Asansol, heart of the coal belt, is once again attracting investors to the region.
  • In the steel city of Durgapur, there is considerable expansion of townships and other facilities.
  • Bardhaman looks quite bright in terms of development.
  • The rapid expansion of business activity in the state as a whole is boosting demand for built space as well as built-to-suit offices.
  • West Bengal arguably has one of the most aggressive incentive packages for IT / ITES companies and developers alike, including subsidised land, exemption from stamp duty and property tax.
  • Kolkata is a high priority destination for international retailers because of its large population and disposable income.
  • The entry of many reputed hotel groups in recent years has been in response to the expanding business activities in the state.
  • There is a strong residential demand, as shown by the absorption patterns of recent residential projects, which are expected to grow in tandem with economic activity and investor interest.
  • A unique and innovative public-private partnership model that has been put in place by the West Bengal government is helping the residential sector to grow at a fast pace.
  • Because of the state's high literacy rate, Bengal offers corporates with a well equipped work force.
  • Moreover, land in Bengal is more easily available at lower costs when compared to other metros such as Mumbai and Delhi.
  • Kolkata is a net exporter of electricity, which reduces the operating costs in the city.

According to the Global Hunger Index, India ranks 65th out of 88 countries

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One piece of bread a day / Was all I had,
Sometimes I would break it in half,
Sometimes, I could make it toast,
My children's bellies full / My stomach churning,
I drank water / To calm the burning,
I had more than most / Reminding myself of those,
Who have a handful of rice / Once a week,
They know fear / They know pain,
They know hunger / Far better than I ever could.

Alisha Rose's poem, Hunger, brings out the essence of a grave problem that plagues not only India, but the entire world.

According to the Global Hunger Index, India ranks 65th out of 88 countries, with a hunger rate of 23.9.

India, which was largely unaffected by the recent global economic slowdown, however, appears to have made little progress in tackling hunger and malnutrition. The situation remains 'alarming' in the country on this front.

Countries like Uganda (38th); Mauritania (40th); Zimbabwe (58th) and many others have a better record than India on this front. Even war-torn nations have managed to combat the scourge of hunger quite well, while India -- even though it boasts of being the second fastest growing economy in the world -- languishes far behind and millions in the country go hungry.


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21 per cent of the Indian population is undernourished

The report -- released on Wednesday by the International Food Policy Research Institute, German aid group Welthungerhilfe and Irish aid group Concern Worldwide -- said that the number of malnourished people was rising as a result of recent events.

"The current situation of food crisis, financial crunch and global recession has further undermined the food security and the livelihoods of the poor," it said.

The index ranks countries on under-nourishment, prevalence of child malnutrition and rates of child mortality.

It said 21 per cent of the Indian population was undernourished (between 2003 and 2005), 43.5 per cent Indian children under the age of five were underweight (between 2002 and 2007) and the under five-years age infant mortality rate in 2007 was 7.2 per cent.

46% of Indian children below the age of 5 are underweight

In September 2009, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh projected a food stock of 50 million tonne. Yet, close to 300 million Indians go without food every day!

India continues to burnish its international image with initiatives like Brand India, a public-private campaign whose stated mission is to 'build positive perceptions of India globally'.

But when the prime minister acknowledged the country's undernourished children as a 'national shame', the statement highlighted how India's economic success co-exists with its persistently high rates for hunger, malnutrition, and income poverty.

According to the World Bank, 46 per cent of Indian children below the age of five are underweight, and the World Food Program says that close to 30 per cent of the world's hungry live in India.


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Does solution lie in biodiverse ecosystems?

According to a recent report in The Hindu, biodiverse ecosystems contain naturally evolved genetic strengths and unique food technologies developed by traditional communities in different climates, soils and temperatures. Harnessing and sharing these capabilities equitably will help humanity adapt to rising temperatures and the poorest of the poor feed themselves in harsh climates.

To that end, the Chennai Declaration set out a series of strategies that are the product of three days of intense discussion, at the M.S Swaminathan Research Foundation, of the senior representatives from organisations across the world such as the UN Environment Programme, UN Food and Agricultural Organisation, International Rice Research Institute, International Fund for Agricultural Development, World Food Prize Fund, and India's National Biodiversity Authority and Ministry of Environment and Forests.

"The declaration makes a bridge of issues at global, national and local levels between the challenges for conservation and food security," said Angela Cropper, deputy executive director, UN Environment Programme.

These include: according economic value to the services nature and agriculture rendered and setting up mechanisms for payment for such services; acknowledging that the custodians of biodiverse resources are farmers and fisherfolk; finding markets for neglected but nutritious crops; including rural communities in biodiversity strategies; refocussing research and development priorities and promoting biodiversity literacy through public education to build an ethic of conservation.

Jairam Ramesh, Union Minister of State for Environment and Forests, present at the valedictory session, pledged to take forward the 'wonderful ideas' contained in the declaration.

He said he would do his best to integrate climate change mitigation strategies with biodiversity conservation in both national policy and in international discussion in Mexico later this year. 2010 is the International Year of Biodiversity.


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India leads the world in hunger

Despite its economic successes, India leads the world in hunger. According to the 2008 Global Hunger Index, which is calculated by the International Food Policy Research Institute, India has close to 350 million people who are food insecure -- in other words, who are not sure where their next meal will come from.

To put that into context, that is the same as the entire populations of Germany, France and the United Kingdom all going hungry.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation believes that over 1 billion people will go hungry in 2009.

Almost 100 million (10 per cent) of those have been made newly hungry by the Financial Crisis. By that grim calculus, India's hungry have grown to at least 300 million, with India providing 30 per cent of the world count.

India is the second most populated country in the world. With a population of 1.173 billion, the hungry make up over 25 per cent or one in four in the country. The percentage is probably better than it was fifty years ago, but the absolute number is growing.

Compare this to China, which has a larger population (1.334 billion) and which 50 years ago was arguably poorer.

It has managed to bring over 500 people out of poverty, its hungry count is today less than 100 million, and that number is shrinking every year.


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Key solution lies in technology

According to Ramakrishnan, the FAO believes that the supply of available arable land is running out. At the same time, farmers are either getting diminishing returns from their current land, or they are having to put ever more inputs to get the same yield.

Much of the progress in feed the world since the 1970's has been thanks to the Green Revolution, pioneered by Norman Borlaug, who helped the Mexicans to vastly increase their crop yields.

He then took this technology worldwide, with fantastic results in India and many other nations. Sadly, Mr Borlaug passed on the 12 September 2009.

The Green Revolution relied on high-yielding crop varieties, together with fertilisers and other methods to more than double crop yields.

Since that great productivity burst, however, technology has stagnated.

There is a great deal that newer technology can offer. New crop varieties are being developed that require considerably less water and nitrogen. Lasers can be used to flatten fields, and sprinklers can greatly reduce water wastage.

Governments in India and elsewhere need to focus on a second Green Revolution to create another quantum leap in productivity.

We need to get back on the path of hunger reduction that we were -- until recently -- so successfully treading. Otherwise the food riots of last year and doubling of potato and lentil prices this year will seem like - pardon the pun - chicken feed.


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Is India's prosperity one of the causes?

Prosperity in countries like India is good but it triggers increased demand for better nutrition, which in turn leads to higher food prices, former US President George W Bush said in 2008, leading to a major hue and cry.

Prior to this, then US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice too had stated that 'apparent improvement' in the diets of people in India and China and consequent food export caps is among the causes of the current global food crisis.

Bush argued that there are many factors for the present crisis, only one of which was investment on biofuels like ethanol.

"Worldwide, there is increasing demand. There turns out to be prosperity in developing world, which is good. It's going to be good for you because you'll be selling products in the countries, you know, big countries perhaps, and it's hard to sell products into countries that aren't prosperous. In other words, the more prosperous the world is, the more opportunity there is," Bush had said.

"It also, however, increases demand. So, for example, just as an interesting thought for you, there are 350 million people in India who are classified as middle class. That's bigger than America. Their middle class is larger than our entire population."

"And when you start getting wealth, you start demanding better nutrition and better food, and so demand is high, and that causes the price to go up," he said.

Bush also listed change in weather patterns and increase in basic costs like that of energy as factors contributing to higher food prices.


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What actually led to the crisis

Several factors contributed to the rapid spike in global food prices. These are:

  • Increased consumer demand for food;
  • Oil, and energy supplies among emerging markets such as China and India, leading to rising energy costs;
  • Lower crop yields resulting from adverse weather conditions and
  • Higher corn prices stemming from increased biofuel production.

Subsequently, a significant increase in world cereal production in 2008 led to improved global cereal stocks and an associated reduction in the international prices of most cereals, representing a 50 per cent decrease in many cases since May 2008.

However, food prices remain high in most developing countries.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, food emergencies, resulting from the combined effects of chronic food insecurity and high food price levels, persist in 31 countries, including 20 African nations.

In an article in The Hindu M S Swaminathan, Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha) and former chairman, National Commission on Farmers, wrote:

With a population of over 1.1 billion, India's agricultural strategy should aim to keep the Central and State governments in a commanding position with reference to the management of food distribution systems such as PDS, Integrated Child Development Services, and school noon meal programme.

In the ultimate analysis, assured and remunerative marketing will hold the key to stimulate and sustain farmers' interest in producing for the market. Climate change may result in adverse changes in temperature, precipitation and sea level.

Dependence only on wheat and rice will enhance vulnerability to climatic factors.

Therefore, there should be revitalisation of the earlier food traditions of rural and tribal families, who in the past depended for their daily bread on a wide range of millets, grain legumes, tubers and vegetables.

The PDS should include, wherever appropriate, ragi and a wide range of nutritious cereals, inappropriately referred to as coarse cereals, and tubers.

India has the technological and economic capability to demonstrate how farming systems can be adjusted to different weather patterns.



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Corruption in public distribution system causing starvation deaths

The prime minister of India in his foreword in the Report to The People dated May 22, 2007, claimed: "In this 60th year of independence, the country should have the satisfaction of recording for the fifth year in a succession a rate of economic growth of over 8.5 per cent."

The Asian Legal Resource Centre, however, is not sure whether the estimated over 200 million Indians who are presently suffering from malnourishment, and the many more million who have done so during past decades, will be satisfied with this growth.

The country's overwhelming population is often given as an excuse to justify poverty and starvation in India.

This theory is applicable only if the state itself is poor and has no means to procure enough food for its people. India is not poor, even though 70 per cent of Indians are.

Defense spending of huge proportions in a country where a section of the population equivalent to 2/3rds the size of that of the United States is undernourished or suffering from malnourishment, is difficult to stomach.

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food has highlighted this contradiction of priorities in his report following his mission to India in 2005.

The management of the public distribution system suffers from corruption particularly black marketing, caste prejudices and the utter failure of various local governments.

This is because the longer the people remain poor and near starvation, the easier it is for the village-head to continue subjecting them to bonded labour.

The actual number of households using the PDS is around 91 million, significantly less than the 160 million being claimed by the government. Seventy-eight per cent of these persons are trying to make use of the system -- 26 per cent are from urban areas while 52 per cent are rural households.

Of these 91 million households an alarming 61 per cent claim that the PDS is plagued by corruption and 49 per cent claim that corruption has increased in the past year.

The PDS is viewed as the most corrupt institution in India.



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What needs to be done: A few suggestions

The Asian Legal Resource Centre requests the Human Rights Council to:

  • Recommend that the government of India take immediate steps to prevent widespread corruption within the PDS -- these steps must include the establishment of independent and separate mechanisms to investigate cases of corruption in the PDS.

This mechanism must be independent from the local police, as the latter is corrupt and therefore inefficient in investigating corruption.

This requires a change in the existing domestic law -- The Essential Commodities Act, 1955, and the government of India must be urged to make such changes and facilitate this process;

  • Request the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food to further study the specifics of corruption within India's PDS system, so that the Rapporteur can help the government to address this issue more effectively;
  • Request the government of India to urge its state governments to set-up the required number of special courts to deal with cases of corruption within the PDS;
  • Urge the government of India to expand a functioning PDS network within the country, so that it covers not only the 16 per cent currently being covered, but covers all persons in need of food security assistance.
  • Request various UN bodies such as the UNDP and the FAO to assist the Government of India in addressing the issue of hunger and starvation in India, particularly through proper and vigorous implementation of development programmes in the country.
  • To further request the government of India to immediately implement the recommendations made by the UN Rapporteur on Right to Food in his report - E/CN.4/2006/44/Add.2 - and to make necessary policy changes required to address this situation.

India recorded 7.4 per cent growth in 2009-10, which was more than the 7.2 per cent projected

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While presenting the report card of United Progressive Alliance - II, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Tuesday that he was looking to the year ahead with 'cautious optimism due to the uncertainties in the horizon'.

Stating that the pressure on prices was a major problem, the prime minister said that the economy would grow by 8.5 per cent in the current year.

Without mentioning the threat to growth from the European sovereign debt crisis, Singh said: "This (India's growth) is one of the best performances in the world... There are uncertainties on the horizon, but on the whole I look to the year ahead with cautious optimism."

India recorded 7.4 per cent growth in 2009-10, which was more than the 7.2 per cent projected earlier. Economic growth had slipped to 6.7 per cent in 2008-09, after four straight years of average nine per cent expansion.

Concerned over inflation, which breached double digit level (10.6 per cent) in February, the Prime Minister said the government would monitor the situation and "take whatever corrective steps are necessary to rein in" prices.

Although he sounded cautious on the developing crisis in Europe, triggered by Greece's sovereign debt crisis and bank failures in Spain, the Prime Minister said India must withdraw fiscal stimulus to boost economic growth and reduce deficit in a calibrated manner.

The government resorted to fiscal stimuli to deal with the fallout of global slowdown. "It has worked well, but now we must return to the path of fiscal prudence."

The country's fiscal deficit is estimated at 5.5 per cent of GDP this fiscal, but may come down on higher than expected revenues (nearly Rs one lakh crore) from sale of 3G telecom and broadband wireless licences.

In the Budget for 2010-11, the government increased excise duties and duties on fuel as a part of withdrawal of stimulus unveiled in the wake of the 2008 global crisis.


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Ailing national carrier Air India is being restructured and the government will infuse Rs 1,200 crore (Rs 12 billion) as additional equity in the airline, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Tuesday.

The National Aviation Company of India Ltd, which runs the national carrier, "is being restructured. A decision has been taken to infuse a sum of Rs 2,000 crore (Rs 20 billion) as equity in NACIL, out of which Rs 800 crore (Rs 8 billion) has already been released," he said in the Report to the People on completion of one year of the UPA's second term in office.

He said the new Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi was "soon going to be fully operational, well in time for the Commonwealth Games 2010."

The new airport has been "designed to cater to 100 million passengers per annum by 2036", he said, adding that the modernisation of 35 non-metro airports was under way.

Referring to the special developmental needs of the Northeastern states, the prime minister said the government has approved three greenfield airports for the region.

Of them, the one at Pakyong in Sikkim "is already under construction involving a cost of Rs 264 crore (Rs 2.64 billion)", he said.

The development of Tezu airport in Arunachal Pradesh at a cost of Rs 79 crore (Rs 790 million) was approved in 2009-10.

"The project is being implemented by the Airports Authority of India. The airport will be ready for operations by March 2012," the prime minister said.


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Singh said his government will invest Rs 36,000 crore (Rs 360 billion) in programmes for providing basic services to urban poor and development of slums.

"Of the projects sanctioned under the JNNURM so far, an investment of around Rs 36,000 crore is devoted to the programmes for basic services to urban poor and development of slums."

The UPA-II aims to make the country slum-free in the next five years under the Rajiv Awas Yojana for slum dwellers.

"Construction of around 1.5 million houses for the poor and slum dwellers has been approved," the report card states.

Under RAY, affordable housing would be provided to the urban poor and they would be given property rights as well.



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The Planning Commission of India recently adopted the Tendulkar Committee's methodology for poverty estimate that includes spends on education and health besides food, taking the number of the poor to a whopping 37.2 per cent from 27.5 per cent estimated earlier in 2004.

This means that India now has 100 million more people living below the poverty line than in 2004.

The Planning Commission, which was asked by the Empowered Group of Ministers on Food to give its estimate of below the poverty line families for implementing the proposed food security law, is likely to submit its report to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh soon, sources said.

A Plan panel meeting chaired by deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia adopted the Suresh Tendulkar Committee report which had suggested inclusion of expenditure on health and education besides food to compute poverty.

National estimates of the percentage of the population falling below the poverty line are based on surveys of sub-groups, with the results weighted by the number of people in each group.

Definitions of poverty vary considerably among nations. For example, rich nations generally employ more generous standards of poverty than poor nations.

What does poverty in India actually mean? It is difficult for those living in an industrialised country to truly appreciate the level of poverty in our country.

In the West, even those living in poverty can live in well-constructed dwellings, with heating, clean running water, indoor toilet facilities, access to health care, and even a vehicle. But such luxuries are a distant dream for India's poor.

So how does India arrive at below poverty line data? Is the level of poverty in India on the decline? Click NEXT to read further. . .



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How did the Plan Panel calculate poverty earlier

The Planning Commission had been estimating the incidence of poverty at National and State level (both in rural and urban areas) since the Sixth Five Year Plan on the basis of the recommendations of the Task Force (1979) on projections of minimum needs and effective consumption demand.

These estimates have been revised as per the methodology recommended by the Expert Group on Estimation of Proportion and Number of Poor chaired by Prof. DT Lakdawala.

The expert group, while accepting the definition of poverty line used by the Task Force, set out an alternative methodology for estimation of poverty ratios using quinquennial consumer expenditure survey data of the NSSO and Statespecific poverty lines.

As a departure from the methodology followed by the Task Force, the expert group estimated poverty on the basis of consumer expenditure surveys and did not make any adjustments on the basis of National Accounts.

The government finally approved the methodology for estimating poverty with a slight modification of the Expert Group Methodology for updating the urban poverty line on the basis of Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers alone instead of average of Consumer Price Index of Industrial Workers and Consumer Price Index of Urban Non-manual Employees.



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Poverty rate has risen to 37.2%

With the poverty rate rising, the Congress-ruled government will now need to spend more money on the poor.

The Indian government spends only 1 per cent of its gross domestic product on healthcare facilities, forcing millions to struggle to get medicines, Oxfam and 62 other agencies said in a report called: Your Money or Your Life last year.

The government has found that 100 million more Indians are actually living below the poverty line than previously thought. Over 370 million Indians -- 40 per cent of the population -- are now eligible for subsidised food supplies.

The re-calculation is based on earnings and the ability of a family to afford one meal a day meeting minimum nutritional needs. India's poor has been hit by the sharp rise in food prices -- the official index indicates that food price inflation has varied between 18 per cent and 20 per cent in recent months.


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What does the World Bank have to say?

According to the World Bank, more people are living in extreme poverty in developing countries than previously thought as it adjusted the recognised yardstick for measuring global poverty to $1.25 a day from $1.

The poverty-fighting institution said there were 1.4 billion people -- a quarter of the developing world -- living in extreme poverty on less than $1.25 a day in 2005.

Last year, the World Bank said there were 1 billion people living under the previous $1 a day poverty mark.

The new figures are likely to put fresh pressure on big donor countries to move more aggressively to combat global poverty, and on countries to introduce more-effective policies to help lift the poorest.

The Bank has estimated that 100 million people could fall into extreme poverty because of soaring food and energy prices.


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Is India's poverty measuring method controversial?

Countries struggle with measuring their poverty populations, a figure that often determines the distribution of public assistance funds to those in need.

The World Bank estimates that 1.4 billion people live below an income of $1.25 per day and that 2.6 billion live below the $2 level worldwide.

Deciding which of these figures represents 'poverty' is up to the individual.

India is an example of the controversial nature of statistical estimates, although it is far from the only example in this controversy.

Poverty measures in the United States are frequently criticised.

India also serves as a good example since changes in the country's poverty definition can add hundreds of millions to the global poverty population.

India's official poverty measure has long been based solely upon the ability to purchase a minimum recommended daily diet of 2,400 kilocalories (kcal) in rural areas where about 70 percent of people live, and 2,100 kcal in urban areas.

Rural areas usually have higher kcal requirements because of greater physical activity among rural residents.

  • The National Planning Commission, which is responsible for the estimate, currently estimates that a monthly income of about Rs 356 (about $7.74) per person is needed to provide the required diet in rural areas and Rs 539 in urban areas.
  • Factors such as housing, healthcare and transportation are not taken into account in the poverty estimates.
The estimate is derived from the National Sample Survey, which measures monthly per capita consumer expense every


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India's BPL population: Measures adopted

The below poverty line population is currently estimated at 29 per cent in rural areas and 26 per cent in urban areas.

The BPL estimates set a rough ceiling on how many people are eligible for BPL identity cards, which provide some commodities at greatly reduced prices.

The income amounts given above to estimate the BPL population have often been laughed at by the Indian press as 'ridiculously low' and 'astounding.'

To address the issue, the Tendulkar Committee was set up in 2008 and reported its recommendations in November 2009.

In 2008, the Union (national) rural development ministry set up a commission to examine alternative methods of estimating poverty.

The commission reported its findings in late 2009.

At the outset, the commission felt that monetary amounts specified by the Planning Commission for a minimal diet were too low. Instead of Rs 356 a month per person in rural areas, Rs 700 was considered necessary (Rs. 1,000 in urban areas).

The commission recommended that the proportion of the rural population living below poverty be raised to at least 50 per cent.

But even that figure was achieved by lowering the rural kcal requirement to 2,100, the same as in urban areas, and adding a minimum monthly cereal consumption of 12.25 kilograms.

If the 2,400 kcal criterion had been kept, the percentage of India's rural population living in poverty would have risen to about 80 per cent.



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India's poverty portrays a grim picture

Economic reposrts noted that India's recent economic growth had simply bypassed the vast majority of the population, benefiting a relative few.

To the credit of the current national government, serious steps are being taken to reach the poor providing social security programs, increased education facilities, and local-level technical training.

According to oneworld.net, despite sustained high gross domestic product growth in India, latest estimates of global poverty by World Bank suggest that India has more people living below $2 than even sub-Saharan Africa.

These new figures should compel political leaders and policymakers to devise fresh strategies to reduce poverty.

None other than the World Bank has busted the hype about India's post-liberalisation success.

According to the Bank's new estimates, India is home to roughly one-third of all the poor in the world.



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Why these new estimates are significant

The new estimates are based on recently re-calculated purchasing power parity exchange rates that make comparisons across countries possible.

The new PPP has been arrived at as 'the average poverty line found in the poorest 10-20 countries,' according to the Bank's briefing note.

In other words, nearly five out of 10 Indians live below what the world's poorest countries consider the poverty line.

These sobering figures have emerged from the World Bank's latest estimates on global poverty, and clearly hint at the fruits of economic benefits having failed to trickle down to India's poor.

The data available shows that the rate of poverty decline in India was faster between 1981 and 1990 than between 1990 and 2005.


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Wherein does the solution lie?

Agriculture holds the key: A report titled Agriculture for Development warned that the international goal of halving extreme poverty and hunger by 2015 would not be reached unless neglect and under investment in the agricultural and rural sectors over the past 20 years was reversed.

It should be noted here that the current World Bank commitments in India's agriculture, irrigation and rural livelihoods amount to $2.6 billion.

Over the years, agriculture in India has seen a steady decline in investment a matter of great concern.

The new estimates show that poverty has been more widespread across the developing world over the past 25 years than previously estimated. But there has also been strong -- if regionally uneven -- progress towards reducing overall poverty.

The World Bank makes the point that while raising people above the poverty line is a relatively achievable task -- it believes poverty levels in 1990 can be halved by 2015 -- it is proving extremely difficult to raise them above the $2 per day mark.

While India's economy is slowly recovering from a global recession with a GDP growth of 7.2 per cent, millions of poor in rural India are finding it difficult to cope with around 17 per cent food price inflation.

It is to be noted that the poverty rate -- those below $1.25 per day -- for India declined from 59.8 per cent in 1981 to 51.3 per cent by 1990, or 8.5 percentage points over nine years.

Between 1990 and 2005 it declined to 41.6 per cent, which is a drop of 9.7 percentage points over 15 years, clearly a much slower rate of decline.

These new figures should give India's leaders, policymakers and economic think-tanks sleepless nights and compel them to take a fresh look at strategies to reduce poverty.

Israel says it allows about 15,000 tonnes of humanitarian aid into Gaza every week

UN urges inquiry into Israel convoy raid


Israeli army footage showing the violence on board the flotilla - the captions and circled points on this video were inserted by the Israeli army

The UN Security Council has issued a statement calling for an impartial inquiry into Israel's raid on a flotilla of Gaza-bound aid ships.

The statement said the investigation should be "prompt, impartial, credible and transparent".

It also condemned the "acts" which led to the deaths of at least 10 civilian activists during the operation.

The raid sparked strong international condemnation and calls for Israel to lift its three-year blockade of Gaza.

LEGALITY OF CONVOY RAID

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  • The UN Charter on the Law of the Sea says only if a vessel is suspected to be transporting weapons, or weapons of mass destruction, can it be boarded in international waters. Otherwise the permission of the ship's flag carrying nation must be sought.
  • The charter allows for naval blockades, but the effect of the blockade on civilians must be proportionate to the effect on the military element for the blockade to be legally enforceable.
  • A ship trying to breach a blockade can be boarded and force may be used to stop it as long as it is "necessary and proportionate".
  • The Israeli Defense Forces say soldiers acted in self-defence.
  • An investigation, either by the UN or by the ship's flag-carrier Turkey, is required to find if the use of force was proportionate to a claim of self defence.

The UN statement was reached after hours of discussion as the council deliberated through the night.

In Turkey, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Israel's raid a "bloody massacre" as he addressed parliament.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has ordered the border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip to be opened. The Rafah crossing has been closed since 2007, although special medical cases are occasionally allowed through.

The Egyptian state news agency said the latest opening was to allow humanitarian aid through. It is not clear how long it will be kept open.

The UN statement was the result of a compromise between Turkey and the US. Turkey was reluctant to water down its criticism of Israel while the US - Israel's closest ally - wanted to temper the language used, says the BBC's UN correspondent Barbara Plett in New York.

Turkey is furious at the commando raid, which targeted a Turkish ship and appeared to have killed mostly Turkish activists, she says.

The compromise removed direct condemnation of Israel and removed references to an international investigation, our correspondent adds.

It also weakened demands for an end to the economic blockade of Gaza that the activists were trying to break, but the incident has refocused international attention on the siege and many states have renewed calls for it to be lifted, she says.

The Palestinian Observer at the UN, Riyad Mansour, said he was disappointed that the language in the final draft had been softened.

In its statement, the Security Council said it "deeply regretted the loss of life and injuries resulting from the use of force during the Israeli military operation in international waters against the convoy sailing to Gaza".

AT THE SCENE

Jon Donnison

Here at Beersheva prison in the Negev Desert, in the sweltering heat, a procession of foreign diplomats and lawyers has been trying to gain access to the prisoners.

Most have been let in and so has a party from the International Red Cross. Those who have come out have not said much more than that they have been able to see their prisoners.

Behind the blue and white 8m-high concrete walls, more than 600 people are being held.

For how long and to what purpose is not yet clear. Perspiring journalists can be seen scanning the Israeli newspapers, the headlines reading "Botched raid on Free Gaza Flotilla" and "Flotilla Fiasco".

The council "condemns those acts which resulted in the loss of at least 10 civilians and many wounded, and expresses its condolences to their families".

The council requested the immediate release of the ships as well as the civilians held by Israel.

It also stressed that the situation in Gaza was "not sustainable".

Shortly after the UN statement was released, several Gaza militants crossed the border into Israel and exchanged fire with troops, the Israeli military said. Two militants were killed, it said.

Russia and the European Union have also jointly called for an impartial inquiry into the Israeli operation and for crossings into Gaza to be opened.

'Self-defence'

Israel's UN envoy said troops acted in self-defence, charges the campaigners deny.

"This flotilla was anything but a humanitarian mission," Israel's deputy UN ambassador Daniel Carmon said.

He said the activists had used "knives, clubs and other weapons" to attack the soldiers who boarded the lead boat, the Mavi Marmara.

Captain Aria Shaliker of the Israel Defense Forces, who was part of Monday's operation, says the commandos began the raids armed with paint ball guns.

"I was, myself, on one of the boats, the Israeli boats, approaching the flotilla," he told the BBC's World Today programme.

The Security Council deeply regrets the loss of life and injuries resulting from the use of force during the Israeli military operation in international waters against the convoy sailing to Gaza

UN Security Council

"It is true that the Israeli commander unit... came on board with paint ball weapons... in order to disperse [people] if there was violence. They were ready for a violent... demonstration on board the flotilla, especially on the big boat, the Marmara. No-one really expected that there would be such a violent outcome of what happened.

"First, you know, the soldiers tried to disperse, but in the end when they were shot at, you know when there was shooting... from the other side, there's no other way than turning from paint ball to live ammunition."

The campaigners say the soldiers opened fire without any provocation.

Of the 679 surviving activists, who were brought to the Israeli port of Ashdod, only 50 agreed to be voluntarily deported and more than 30 are being treated in hospital for their injuries, reports the BBC's Wyre Davies in Jerusalem.

That means that almost 600 people, from several countries, are still being held in detention centres across Israel and being questioned by the authorities.

Israel has imposed an information blackout, making it difficult to gather first-hand accounts from the campaigners.

The ships were carrying 10,000 tonnes of aid in an attempt to break Israel's three-year blockade of the Gaza Strip.

Israel says it will deliver the ships' aid cargo to Gaza by land.

Nato ambassadors are due to hold emergency talks in Brussels at Turkey's request to discuss the raid.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he regretted any loss of life, but gave full backing to the action of the Israeli troops.

Mr Netanyahu cut short a visit to Canada to deal with the growing crisis and cancelled a scheduled meeting in Washington with US President Barack Obama on Tuesday. He is due back in Israel on Tuesday.

Israel tightened its blockade of the Gaza Strip after Hamas seized power there in 2007.

Israel says it allows about 15,000 tonnes of humanitarian aid into Gaza every week, but the UN says this is less than a quarter of what is needed.

The BBC's Chris Hogg in Shanghai says the man, named by officials as Zhu Jun, had reportedly

Three judges shot dead at a court in Hunan, China


People outside Lingling District People's Court in Yongzhou,  Hunan, China (1 June 2010) Police sealed off the court building after the attack

Three judges have been shot dead at a court in China's southern Hunan province by a man armed with a submachine gun, reports say.

Three other judges were injured before the man, who was also carrying two more weapons, killed himself.

Officials told the BBC the attacker was a 46-year-old local man who worked as head of security at a post office.

Correspondents say shootings are relatively rare in China, as few people have access to firearms.

The shooting happened during just before 1000 (0200 GMT) at the Lingling District People's Court, said Xinhua.

The BBC's Chris Hogg in Shanghai says the man, named by officials as Zhu Jun, had reportedly borrowed his weapons from a colleague saying he needed to inspect them.

He barged into an office at the courtroom and opened fire on the officials.

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A spokesman for the local propaganda department told the Associated Press news agency the judges had been discussing a case unrelated to the gunman.

Xinhua said the man had been motivated by revenge - he was reported to have divorced his wife three years ago and was unhappy at the way the court divided their wealth.

China has seen a series of knife attacks in school in recent weeks which have left 17 people dead and dozens injured.

The country has in the past had a comparatively low rate of violent crime, meaning the recent violence has been all the more shocking.