NRIs Returning to India

Entries from September 2007

Gulf NRI grooms And HIV scanner

September 26, 2007 · 1 Comment

Parents of marriageable girls looking for alliances with NRIs settled in the Gulf are increasingly asking the prospective bridegrooms to undergo HIV(AIDS) tests. Societal pressures from parents and NGOs in India are driving the motion, the Gulf News reported.

“There is no point in placing the blame on anybody over this. One thing that we all are aware of is that HIV(AIDS) has reached epidemic proportions. I do not see any harm if required to undergo a test,” said A NRI who works in a Dubai-based public relations agency.

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The Smell of My country

September 21, 2007 · 2 Comments

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Bollywood eyes NRIs for instant success

September 21, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Karan Johar started the NRI culture with Kal Ho Na Ho, Mira Nair perfected it with The Namesake. And as the trend goes American-desi film factory is working overtime it seems.

Latest in the genre is Anubhav Pal-Manish Acharya’s Loins of Punjab Presents.

Bollywood’s own obsession with sarson-de-Khet from Punjab is not for nothing, it directly translates into NRI-dollars.

Vipul Shah’s Namastey London and Anil Sharma’s Dharmendra-Sunny-Bobby starrer Apne had only one competitor Himmesh Reshammiya’s Aap Ka Suroor.

So do we have to guess the secret of the director’s success?

“The NRI market just loves Punjab,” said Vipul Shah, Filmmaker.

And why just Punjab there are many American-desi soul longing for Kolkata ready to shed dollars.

Mira Nair, Director

So, if you’re wondering what is with Bollywood directors showering love over vilayati cousins stop wondering and get real it’s their dollars that they are after.

Source:->http://www.ndtvmovies.com/

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Kerala keen to set up university for NRIs

September 20, 2007 · Leave a Comment

 

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Kerala is ready to set up a university for non-resident Indians (NRIs), Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan on Tuesday informed the Kerala assembly.

“We are keen to have it in our state and I assure you that we will provide all necessary infrastructure, and if needed we will give it for free,” said Achuthanandan in response to Congress legislator M Murali who raised the issue.

Murali urged the house that Kerala should take the lead in setting up an NRI university since the largest number of expatriates was from Kerala.

Incidentally, this is the first time Kerala has come forward to set up a university for non-resident Indians. Other southern states have already pitched in for this.

The proposed university would be a deemed university with 50 per cent of the seats to be reserved for children of NRIs and the remaining seats for Indian residents.

According to the guidelines, the institute should be run by a trust formed in India and the state government should allot it the required land. A reputed educational institute functioning abroad would handle the overall management.

The Union Cabinet recently cleared the proposal under the University Grants Commission Act, and decided the university would be located in a Special Economic Zone (SEZ).

The university would be a boon for Indians living abroad. Students from nearly 130 countries, particularly in the developing world, where educational facilities are either not available or are limited, look up to India for their higher educational needs.

Source:-> http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/

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Policy for overseas Indian workers soon

September 17, 2007 · Leave a Comment

The government is working on a policy framework for safeguarding the interests of overseas Indian workers, Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs Vayalar Ravi said on Monday.

“It is… imperative that we develop a policy framework and an institutional arrangement that will best serve the overseas Indian workers over the medium to long term,” the minister said while inaugurating the second annual meeting of the heads of Indian missions in the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, Malaysia, Jordan, Yemen and Libya.

The two-day meet, being held by the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs (MOIA), will discuss several policy measures for safeguarding interests of Indian workers abroad.

Stating that overseas Indian workers faced difficult working and living conditions, Ravi said: “The effort of my ministry has been focussed on achieving a minimum level of policy coherence and in defining minimum standards of living and working conditions that must be applied across all countries that have a significant overseas Indian workers population.”

There are around five million Indians in the six GCC countries of UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar and Kuwait. Many of them are working as contract labourers in the booming construction industry there.

In Malaysia, people of Indian origin constitute around eight percent of the country’s population of around 24 million. Many of them had migrated from India to work in the rubber plantations in the Southeast Asian nation.

Jordan, Yemen and Libya too have large numbers of Indian workers.

The minister stressed that the policy framework must include some non-negotiable terms of work contract.

“Such a policy framework must include certain non-negotiable terms of the work contract, an effective outreach programme for grievance redressal and a strong legislative framework to deal with intermediaries involved in the exploitation of the workers,” he said.

Apart from this, the two-day conference will also discuss special measures for protection of women emigrants in those countries, an MOIA official said.

Last year, a similar conference of envoys was organised by the MOIA at Doha in Qatar.

Source:->http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

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Every one’s dream a home…

September 14, 2007 · Leave a Comment

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Dubai 9 eyes real estate sector in three countries

September 13, 2007 · 2 Comments

DUBAI-BASED property developer Dubai 9 is assessing investment opportunities in the real estate sector in China, India and Malaysia, managing director Hayan Merchant said.

“We are still in the early stages of seeing what we can offer these markets, including the Iskandar Development Region (IDR).

Whatever we do has to fit into our business model of developing residential, commercial and real estate for tourism activities,” he said yesterday.

Several Middle Eastern groups have made commitments to develop real estate at IDR.

Property prices are expected to rise further in Asian cities and developers that are able to capture new lifestyle trends stand to win in markets away from their home turf.

Hong Kong’s Shui On Group chairman and chief executive Vincent H.S. Lo said developers needed ideas that catered to the needs of the younger generation.

DLF Ltd chairman Kushal Pal Singh said there was a huge gap in demand and supply in India’s office and residential units.

He cautioned that while there was huge scope for foreign companies to invest in India, there was a need to select the right partner.

Merchant said the boom in construction activities and real estate in Dubai was sustainable although a bubble was predicted a few years ago.

“The bubble will not burst but minor corrections can be expected in the property sector,” he added.

Hong Leong Group executive chairman Kwek Leng Beng said he would continue to invest in Singapore on expectation of further upside in the property market.

“Singapore is becoming a global city with many people buying high-end condominiums,” he said.

Macau continues to face challenges from emerging casinos but Melco International Development Ltd chairman and CEO Lawrence Ho said the group had a strategy in place to ensure Macau remained the region’s gaming hub.

Source:->http://biz.thestar.com.my

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Hardest-working saint in real estate

September 10, 2007 · Leave a Comment

With home sales falling to five-year lows, homeowners desperate to sell their homes are looking for a little divine intervention.

Dawn Hoernemann of Minneapolis, Minnesota, had her one-bedroom home on the market for four months. Every weekend there was an open house. But there were no offers. That’s until she took her mom’s advice and buried a statue of St. Joseph upside down in her front yard.

The next week, she had three offers and her home was sold. “I couldn’t believe it. I don’t know what it is about it. It worked. It’s some sort of a miracle,” says Hoernemann.

This “miracle” has it roots in Catholicism. According to the tradition, burying St. Joseph began hundreds of years ago in Europe. St. Teresa of Avila, a nun in the 16th century, buried a medal of the saint and prayed to St. Joseph to help secure land for a convent. The ritual is said to have worked, and so the trend of burying St. Joseph has caught on.

Just ask Phil Cates of Modesto, California. His online retail site, StJosephStatue.com, offers the “Underground Real Estate Agent” home-selling kits. For $9.95, the 4-inch statue comes with a burial bag and a burial instruction booklet. There’s even an 8-inch version of the statue for larger homes.

Sales have increased 100 percent in the past two years, according to Cates.

Robert Malhame, who runs Malhame & Co — a Catholic supply company on Long Island, says sales of the St. Joseph Statue spiked last year. And he expects the trend to last. “We’re probably going to sell over 100,000 this year,” he says. The biggest demand is coming from the Northeast and the Midwest, he says.

Jan Wheelehan, the store manager at a Catholic retail supply store in St. Louis, Missouri, says the statues have been one of the better sellers, with sales increasing 25 percent this year. “People seem more panicked and there is a hurried-ness to their expression when they come in,” she says.

St. Joseph is even on the auction block. There are dozens of St. Joseph home-selling kits on Ebay. From glow in the dark St. Joseph statues to mini pocket shrines, St. Joseph has a whole new following.

Burying St. Joseph statues has its own set of rules, too, although they can vary.

Home sellers are instructed to dig a hole near the “For Sale” sign. The hole should be three inches taller than the statue itself. The saint should then be facing the direction of the street. Then prayers to St. Joseph should be said before the saint is covered with dirt.

Once the house is sold, St. Joseph should be dug up and put in a place of honor in the new home.

Some renters have even cashed in on St. Joseph’s divine intervention in hopes of getting a break on rent or to have their application accepted. They buried St. Joseph statues in flowerpots. The statue’s feet should either be facing the street or in the direction you want to move, according to Cates.

The whole statue-burying process was a bit hard to swallow for Joe Iannacone. His Dallas, Texas, home was on the market earlier this month. Iannacone first heard about the ritual from his godfather.

“I looked on the Web. It was less than $10. So, I said why not?” recalls Iannacone. Six hours later a young woman walked into the house and made a bid. “I’m not very religious,” says Iannacone. “But that was pretty amazing. I was shocked.”

St. Joseph may have made a believer out of some sellers, but for some real estate agents, selling a home isn’t the work of a higher power.

“What a crock!” says Connecticut real estate agent David D’Ausilio. “As a Realtor I think it’s ridiculous. The business has always been simple. If a house is properly priced and properly exposed, it’ll attract buyers and it will sell — St. Joseph or no St. Joseph.”

Cates says the statue is more than just superstition. “It’s the idea of getting beyond yourself. It’s about hoping and praying for something that is bigger than you are,” he says.

And these days, maybe just a little hope for home sellers isn’t such a bad thing.Source:->http://edition.cnn.com

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Gurgaon

September 7, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Hope it may help to travel Gurgaon…

gurgaon.jpg

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Bush offers help to troubled homeowners

September 5, 2007 · Leave a Comment

President Bush outlined his plan Friday for helping troubled subprime borrowers keep their homes. The initiatives target hundreds of thousands of distressed homeowners.Speaking in the Rose Garden, the president, after highlighting some of the recent stronger economic trends, pointed out the weaknesses in the mortgage market as an area of concern, particularly in the subprime sector.

Although he labeled the problem “modest in the overall scheme of things,” he said, “It’s anything but modest if you’re one of the families affected.”

Foreclosure rates have soared over the past year as homeowners struggle to pay off loans that have become more expensive as they mature. Many are hybrid adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), the so-called toxic ARMs, that carried very low initial interest rates (“teaser rates”) for the first two or three years of their term but then reset to much higher rates after that.

Consumers now shun ARMs

The proposals put forward by the president included increasing the help offered by the Federal Housing Authority to troubled borrowers. That may take the form of expanding the pool of borrowers who can apply to the FHA to refinance their loans.

The president wants to work with Congress to temporarily suspend the tax liability that can take effect when borrowers lose their homes through short-sales, and when lenders forgive mortgage debt. That will enable borrowers to more easily rework their loans.

“I believe we need to change that code,” said the president, “so people won’t be penalized when they refinance their homes.”

Bush also discussed putting together a coalition of community groups, government agencies and government-sponsored enterprises, such as Freddie Mac to help homeowners refinance onerous loans. That would include making credit available as well as counseling borrowers on credit issues.

The president also wants to press efforts to combat predatory lending where unscrupulous mortgage brokers and lenders take advantage of naive consumers by steering them into mortgages that are extremely profitable for the brokers and lenders but ultimately unaffordable for borrowers.

Another of the president’s goals is to increase transparency in lending practices so consumers would better understand the true risks and costs of loans they sign up for. That could reduce the number of borrowers facing the loss of their homes in the future.

The fallout from the mortgage meltdown crisis has spread beyond the home-lending and housing industries. It has resulted in a liquidity squeeze that has reached into the corporate world and increased borrowing costs for any less than low-risk propositions.

One thing the president promised not to do was a direct bailout of homeowners facing foreclosures or of lenders with financial problems traced to portfolios of defaulting subprime loans.

Such bailouts, he said, “would only aggravate the problem.”

The administration has been slow to tackle the issues head-on, even as Congress has addressed it in a series of hearings before House and Senate subcommittees starting last spring. Some of the Democratic presidential candidates have also weighed in with plans for relieving distress among subprime borrowers.

Reaction poured in after the president’s speech.

John M. Robbins, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), released a statement that said, “Many of the proposals President Bush rolled out today are ones for which we have long advocated, even before the recent troubles in the subprime mortgage market.”

Chuck Schumer, the Democratic senator from New York, said, “The president stepped up to the plate and made some constructive suggestions.”

Schumer’s analysis calls for a three-part initiative to the subprime crisis:

  • Supplement the help to borrowers that community and non-profit groups provide. These organizations have taken over much of the responsibility for credit counseling and financial advice that loan officers once provided. As part of that, mortgage servicers could be rewarded for providing refinancings for subprime borrowers by giving them the lucrative rights to service these accounts.
  • More money to help pay for refinancings through government-sponsored enterprises, which includes increasing the cap limits on loans that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae can purchase.
  • Mortgage broker regulation to bring rogue originators in line. “We urge the president to take off his ideological blinders and support this,” said Schumer.

According to Dean Baker, an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy, many of the Bush initiatives would leave unaffected many of those homeowners in the most serious trouble.

The suspension of tax liabilities would not mean much to low-income foreclosure victims, who don’t pay much tax anyway. It could, on the other hand, help wealthier real estate investors who speculated on real estate during the boom.

“I don’t see any reason at all to give those people a break,” said Baker.

But according to Mark Zandi, economist for Moody’s Economy.com, the tax initiative could help even lower-income homeowners. They could have $200,000 mortgages that their lenders would be willing to reduce to $150,000, but the tax liability would make that undoable. Suspending that liability could help.

“Enough homeowners could benefit to make a difference,” said Zandi.

Also not prime candidates for government bailouts, in Baker’s view, are Wall Street investors, who the Bush proposals could help by giving defaulting borrowers an out through FHA refinancings.

Said Baker, “There should be zero interest in helping out Wall Street. You don’t want money from taxpayers to go to people who made risky investments.”

Source –>> http://money.cnn.com/

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