Most Recent article
Reviving India's public health service
Financial Times, Tuesday 2 MarchEconomists Forum (Shankar Acharya): The people of India suffer from terrible health. Around 40 per cent of all children under three years are stunted. Nearly 80 per cent are anaemic. Over half of all married women (age 15-49) are anaemic. The incidence of communicable diseases is rampant. Even the well-off often fall victim to outbreaks of diseases such as dengue, diarrhoea, malaria and hepatitis, not to mention swine flu.
Previous Articles
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India: Reviving public health services
Financial Times, Monday 1 March
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Shankar Acharya: Ten myths of Indian economic policy
Financial Times, Monday 1 February
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India: Where are the jobs?
Financial Times, Monday 4 January
-
Asia rises, one economic giant at a time
Financial Times, Tue 28 July 2009 (2 blog links)
Published on one or more of 14 websites.
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Shankar Acharya has written...
- More about 'tamil nadu' than anything else
- A lot about 'tamil nadu' in the last month
Shankar Acharya by numbers...
- 5 articles (since July 2009)
- Average article: 38 column inches (1143 words)
- Shortest article: 28 column inches (830 words)
- Longest article: 43 column inches (1299 words)
Caution: this list is not comprehensive but based on articles published in
21 UK news outlets across 14 different websites.
The information is collected automatically so there are bound to be mistakes.
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The topics Shankar Acharya mentions most:
Journalists who write similar articles
(what's this?)- James Lamont (Financial Times)
- Joe Leahy (Financial Times)
- Martin Wolf (Financial Times)
- Geoff Dyer (Financial Times, The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, The Observer, The Scotsman)
- Alan Beattie (Financial Times)
- Mure Dickie (Financial Times)
- Randeep Ramesh (The Guardian, The Observer)
- John Plender (Financial Times)
- Bill Emmott (The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, The Independent, The Sunday Times, The Times)
- Dean Nelson (The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph, The Sunday Times, The Times)
