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The Fuel Price Paradox: Why You’re Paying More While Oil Costs Less

  The raw-material paradox: Why cheaper crude oil has not meant cheaper petrol A decade of asymmetric taxation, a pandemic windfall captured by the state, and a diluted product sold at full price have combined to leave the Indian motorist paying record amounts for something that should, by any rational reckoning, cost far less Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan T here is a puzzle at the heart of Indian fuel pricing that deserves more scrutiny than it typically receives. In 2014, crude oil — the raw material from which petrol is refined — traded at $105 per barrel. Indian motorists in Delhi paid ₹72 per litre at the pump. Today, the same crude costs roughly $96 per barrel, a decline of nearly 9%. Yet the same Delhi motorist now pays ₹102 per litre, and the Mumbaikar pays ₹111. The raw material became cheaper. The final product became dramatically more expensive. This is the Indian fuel paradox, and its explanation lies not in the global oil market, but in the domestic architecture of taxation....
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Quiet luxury: The sound of silence

  The sound of silence Quiet luxury's rise reflects a deeper renegotiation of what wealth signals — and to whom it speaks  Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan   Jun 2nd 2026  |  Hyderabad F or most of the past three decades, conspicuous consumption was not merely tolerated in polite company — it was practically compulsory. Logos sprawled across handbags, sports cars announced themselves with theatrical exhaust notes, and the private jet became the ultimate status selfie. Wealth, in short, demanded to be seen. That compact, it appears, is unravelling. A quieter sensibility has been steadily asserting itself, particularly among those whose fortunes were not freshly minted. "Quiet luxury" — a phrase that would have struck the old-money set as tautological — has entered the mainstream lexicon with surprising force. What it describes is hardly new: understated tailoring, heritage craftsmanship, materials chosen for longevity rather than legibility. What is new is...

What the Deeper State Means for India — and What Must Be Done

    The Deeper State: Peril & Response What the Deeper State Means for India — and What Must Be Done The RSS’s century-long social project now threatens India’s federal compact, constitutional rights and democratic future. For India’s youth and citizens, the hour for passive observation has passed.     CHUPPALA NAGESH BHUSHAN   Hyderabad — May 2026 CONSTITUTIONS ARE EASY TO ADMIRE and difficult to defend. India’s, adopted in 1950, is among the most ambitious documents of the post-war era: a federal republic of extraordinary diversity, built on the explicit promises of equality before the law, freedom of conscience, and the protection of minorities. It has survived famines, wars, a state of emergency, and several cycles of democratic backsliding. Whether it survives the present moment is the question that India’s citizens — and above all, its young — must now answer. The rise of what Professor Christophe Jaffrelot calls the “deeper ...