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Impact of russia ukrian war on india.pptx

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Impact of russia ukrian war on india.pptx

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Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.
Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.
Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.

Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.
Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.
Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23.
It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight.
It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.

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Impact of russia ukrian war on india.pptx

  1. 1. IMPACT OF RUSSIA UKRAINE WAR ON INDIA Name:- HARSH KUMAR SINGH B.TECH (FT) 7th Semester
  2. 2. What has happened ? • Russia's war in Ukraine is the biggest bugbear for the global economy in 2022-23. • It has directly or indirectly raised the prices of a vast range of things- from food and cooking gas, soaps and cosmetics, cars and city transport, steel and aluminium, to flight tickets and shipping freight. • It's the biggest choke on a world sputtering to a recovery after two years of pandemic slump.
  3. 3. ALL COUNTRIES ARE SUFFERING. But for India, there are a few unexpected windfalls too - thanks in part to the global nature of commodity markets and the steady diplomatic relation that Delhi has maintained with the global pariahs in Moscow.
  4. 4. WHEAT EXPORT • Russia and Ukraine account for 30% of the global wheat trade and the war raised the cereal's price by a fifth in March. • It just so happens that this year India has posted its highest ever wheat production of 111 million tonnes. • It has given a rare opportunity in a commodity that India started exporting in earnest only a decade ago. • Exports have already hit a record high of more than 7 million tonnes in 2021-22, about 10 times the amount exported in 2011-12. And there will be more in 2022-23.
  5. 5. Bangladesh, which accounted for 55% of India's export volumes in 2020-21, was also the third largest export destination for Russia. So, this year India's exports to its neighbor have grown. India is also trying to strike deals with Russia's top two export markets, Egypt and Turkey. India is using the bounty for economic diplomacy too. It has agreed with the United Nations World Food Program to donate 50,000 tonnes to Afghanistan, which has been devastated by a drought and economic turmoil.
  6. 6. DISCOUNTED OIL Oil is the biggest troublemaker that affects prices across sectors. Though Russia accounted for less than 2% of India's oil imports in 2020-21, the war has raised global prices. Given that India imports more than 80% of its needs, it's a major speed breaker for an economy raring to sprint. Russia's offer of $35 a barrel discount to the pre-war prices would go a long way in mitigating the expected inflation and foreign exchange woes this year.
  7. 7. • Given that the price of the benchmark Brent crude was at $97 on February 23, the day before the invasion, Russia's promise would mean a price of $62 - about half the price in Europe at the beginning of April. • Though the amount bought is insignificant for now, it's increasing as the new payment and insurance mechanisms are getting sorted to avoid western sanctions. • It would give India a rare advantage in a world whose recovery hinges on keeping oil prices in check.
  8. 8. INDIAN AIRLINES India reopened its skies to all international flights from March 27. In the month before, Russia closed its airspace to 36 countries as a retaliatory measure for Europe's ban on Russian carriers. But India, which remains in Russia's good books, was spared a block. The Russian Federation's airspace - which straddles the breadth of Asia - is important for carriers plying lucrative long-haul flights from Asia to Europe and North America, including on the fuel-saving polar routes.
  9. 9. • With fighter planes, missiles and drones buzzing over Ukraine, its airspace is closed to all commercial flights. • So, if Russia is closed too, airlines flying, say, the direct London- Delhi or Mumbai-Montreal routes would have to make very long roundabouts, adding to the costs in a gutted travel market. • It's a massive disadvantage for western carriers because jet fuel prices, which account for about 40% of an airline's running costs, have recently hit a record high.
  10. 10. TECH JOBS • In another boon from the blue, as many as 55,000-65,000 jobs in the IT and IT-enabled sectors are expected to shift to India because of the war. • This is mainly because countries such as Poland, Belarus, Croatia, Romania and Bulgaria depend on Ukraine for much their tech workforce.
  11. 11. Other outsourcing powerhouses like the Philippines, Mexico and Brazil would benefit too, but some Indian companies' familiarity with the market is expected to give them an edge. The jobs are likely to include low and mid-range R&D and engineering work, back-office functions, data processing, customer support and solution maintenance services.
  12. 12. DIPLOMATIC NEUTRALITY India found itself in a diplomatic tug-of-war when Russia rolled into Ukraine. Russia is India's biggest arms supplier and a diplomatic ally whose intervention during the 1971 Bangladesh war is still not forgotten in Delhi. On the other side is the US, Ukraine's most powerful ally and India's largest trade and strategic partner. India has chosen to stay neutral.
  13. 13. In a way, it rediscovered the Nehruvian mantra of non- alignment under which India refused to condemn or support USSR repeatedly at the UN. This week, India voiced its dismay at the butchery in Bucha, the Ukrainian town where several unarmed civilians were gunned down. But the day after, as two-thirds of the UN General Assembly voted to boot Russia out of the Human Rights Council, India abstained along with 57 other countries. In Parliament, the government won rare support from the Opposition on the issue. A bipartisanship that earned praise from the Prime Minister too.
  14. 14. WAR IS DESTRUCTION,PEACE IS CONSTRUCTIONS.

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