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Raghav's Take
The Quint
40 episodes
6 hours ago
The Quint's editor-in-chief Raghav Bahl speaks on business, politics and policies.
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All content for Raghav's Take is the property of The Quint and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The Quint's editor-in-chief Raghav Bahl speaks on business, politics and policies.
Show more...
News
Episodes (20/40)
Raghav's Take
196: PDP-BJP: From a “Coalition of Hope” to “Coalition of Fear”
Unquestionably, the Mufti-Modi Pact to create the PDP-BJP coalition government on 1 March 2015 was a Coalition of Immense Hope. Unfortunately, in three years, it had transgressed into a "Coalition of Fear."
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5 years ago
5 minutes

Raghav's Take
212: Don’t Fall for the ‘GDP Growth’ Jumla Ahead of 2019 Elections
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government treats Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, as the God of all economic success. PM Modi cherry-picked and talked about all the good stuff, but "overlooked" many troublesome facts, about India’s economy. Here's a reminder from Raghav Bahl.
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5 years ago
5 minutes

Raghav's Take
230: PM Modi Should Control Clumsy Propagandists Lest They Do More Harm
5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
248: 3 Reasons a 2019 ‘Khichdi’ Coalition Could Be a Political Delicacy
2019 coalition government: In an eerie replay of 1996, the BJP could become the single largest party, the Congress could come in second and a clutch of regional parties could dice the remaining seats. Here are three reasons why the 2019 "khichdi"coalition could be a political delicacy.
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5 years ago
5 minutes

Raghav's Take
1: 3 Reasons a 2019 ‘Khichdi’ Coalition Could Be a Political Delicacy
Khichdi is also a colloquial description of weak coalition governments. The phrase acquired wide currency during 1996-97, when unstable United Front regimes were formed during a sickly interregnum in India’s democracy. Today it’s back in vogue, with several pundits wondering if the 2019 polls shall throw up another khichdi coalition. Listen to The Quint's Editor-in-Chief, Raghav Bahl analyse India's politics.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
249: Listen: How Did The Critic Become the Enemy in Indian Politics
On 28 July, the man responsible for securing our telecom and broadcast infrastructure, RS Sharma revealed his Aadhaar ID number and dared hackers to “harm”, but did he accept his defeat with humility? Listen to The Quint’s Editor-in-Chief Raghav Bahl talk about the culture of intimation in our current political environment.
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5 years ago
5 minutes

Raghav's Take
250: Indian TV Channels Cower as Post-Trump US Media Puts Up a Fight
President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, hugely dissimilar personalities in outward conduct – one writes crude tweets, the other remains strategically silent – have nonetheless created equally polarised democracies ten thousand miles apart. And what about their attitude towards independent news platforms? Listen to The Quint's Editor-in-Chief Raghav Bahl!
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
251: Battleground 2019: What DUSU, Bypolls & ‘Peak Modi’ Indicate
The University of Delhi (DU) immeasurably helped create Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s political brand. His sprint towards the stunning 2014 victory had begun on 6 February 2013 at DU’s Shri Ram College of Commerce.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
252: IL&FS Lessons for Modi From Two Singhs – Manmohan & Jaswant
Ironically, Prime Minister Modi needs to take lessons from the swift, decisive actions of two politicians he holds in disdain, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former Finance Minister Jaswant Singh, says The Quint's founder Raghav Bahl.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
253: Oil, Rupee, IL&FS: Why is Modi Not Using Brahmastra?
Brahmastra, in the Mahabharata, is a “single projectile that is able to destroy the Universe”. Lord Rama is thought to have used it in his last battle with Ravana. Now let’s put it in context of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government. After four years of a blessed existence, Modi is facing his first acute economic challenge. Today, India is again teetering at the edge of a severe macro-economic imbalance: treasuries have crossed 8 percent, the rupee has plummeted by 15 percent to over 74/dollar, oil is perilously close to three figures, and hundreds of stocks are in a severe bear grip even as market indices have crashed by over 15 percent. Does he have the gumption to deploy a policy Brahmastra, to kill the crisis before it careens out of control?
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5 years ago
8 minutes

Raghav's Take
254: Did PM Modi Unwittingly Help Cronies, Punish Investors Over IL&FS?
By not going for a TARP-like bailout, Prime Minister Modi has given an extra gain of Rs 30,000 cr to crony capitalists who allowed IL&FS to crash, while levying an extra tax of Rs 2,00,000 cr on ordinary/innocent investors, like you and me.  The above is very simple arithmetic, but a team of IAS babus (bureaucrats) will never understand it, because it is deeply suspicious of market forces. And Prime Minister Modi has surrendered his economic policies to them, keeping entrepreneurs, tailors and firemen out.
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5 years ago
8 minutes

Raghav's Take
255: From Statue of Unity to RBI-Rift, Here’s How Modi Steered Both
As a Bollywood narrator would say, in dono stories main Modi hai, Patel hai, RSS hai, aur cash bhi hai! But there is a tiny difference between the two, and that is the letter ‘t’. You see, one was about a Statue, the other about a Statute. Prime Minister Modi helmed and orchestrated both the stories. In the first one, he redeemed his 6-year-old pledge to build the world’s tallest statue on river Narmada – a 182-metre salute to Sardar Patel, an icon of India’s independence movement. In the second but bigger story, Modi threatened the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) with a surgical strike.
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5 years ago
7 minutes

Raghav's Take
256: Lutyens’ Delhi Made Modi in 2014, Will it Break Him in 2019?
The Quint's Editor-in-Chief Raghav Bahl argues that Lutyens’ Delhi did more to propel Modi into the PMO and may even be able to bring him down in 2019\. Tune in to this edition of Raghav's Take.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
257: Modi Sir, Your TV Pals Messed up Priyanka Gandhi’s Political Entry
Priyanka Gandhi’s entry into active politics brought on a plethora of nervous and panicked responses from the BJP and several “star journalists”. But the Modi government’s uncouth television henchmen will bring Rahul Gandhi’s Congress roaring back to life, says Raghav Bahl. Listen to the podcast!
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
258: Modi Sir, Kudos on Your First Post-Truth Budget !
Prime Minister Narendra Modi loves to talk up all his “pioneering firsts”. Well, he’s now added a truly lethal one to that arsenal – India’s first post-truth Budget! Exactly 18 hours before the Budget was presented in Parliament, India dramatically upped its previous two years’ GDP numbers. Ironically, the most brazen “upgrade” was reserved for 2016-17 when demonetisation had clearly ravaged the economy. How did this happen? Well, it was simply a matter of tweaking a few numbers and changing the “denominator” against which all key figures and metrics are calculated against. Listen, as Raghav Bahl explains, on this episode of Raghav’s Take.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
259: Dear Akhilesh, Introduce Rahul and Priyanka to Deputy PM Mayawati
On this episode of Raghav’s Take, The Quint’s Editor-in-Chief, Raghav Bahl explains how SP chief Akhilesh Yadav can unite Mayawati, Priyanka Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi, to pose a formidable threat to the Modi-led BJP in the 2019 General elections.
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5 years ago
7 minutes

Raghav's Take
260: Will Modi Pull Off an Indira (1971) or Tank Like Vajpayee (2004)
For those who haven’t heard, a political debate is raging on whether the 2019 elections will be modelled on 1971, when Indira Gandhi trounced a hasty, ill-matched Opposition alliance, or on 2004, when the “invincible” Vajpayee crumbled before a seemingly weak, incoherent patchwork of parties. As with Modi in 2019, both elections were fought by towering incumbents against a bevy of disparate, but united, opponents. Arithmetically, it was a one-on-one contest in most Lok Sabha constituencies. But the two outcomes were like chalk and cheese. What will be Modi’s fate? Before you can answer that question, you need to know the “how, what, why” of the landmark general elections of 1971 and 2004\. Tune in to Raghav’s Take for more.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
261: China, the Centrist Superpower in the India-Pakistan Dogfight
Never waste a good crisis! Because what we weathered this week was a blood-curdling dogfight between India and Pakistan that could have nuked half the global population in and around South Asia.  I concede there is an element of exaggeration here, but big wars often get triggered by tiny accidents of judgement. So better to exaggerate than get tortured in a nuclear winter. Yet a crisis of such proportions is also an opportunity to grow up, become a wiser person/country. So, will India and Pakistan seize upon this dangerous wrinkle to become mature, moderate nuclear neighbours?  Listen to the full podcast now!
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
262: “De-hyphenate” Pakistan; Learn From the China/Taiwan Standoff
In the late 1940s, India and China won independence from colonial rule. While the trajectories of their respective freedom movements were quite different, there was one remarkable similarity. Both broke up into two enemy nations apiece, China/Taiwan and India/Pakistan. For seven decades now, these pairs of estranged siblings have stayed implacable foes. But as China closed in on Superpower status, it de-hyphenated from Taiwan without lessening its hostility. China is now America’s global rival, not Taiwan’s principal adversary. Unfortunately, India has remained fixated on Pakistan, even as our economic heft has multiplied manifold. Yet we continue to invest almost all our diplomatic capital in an India-Pakistan binary. This must change. A country’s standing in world affairs is defined by who its primary competitors are. India must raise its gaze from Pakistan, without lessening its chokehold, yet diminishing the high-pitched/overt importance we give it in our foreign policy narrative. Tune in to this podcast, where The Quint’s Editor-in-Chief Raghav Bahl talks about why India should get away from Pakistan crossfire and give primacy to China instead.
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
263: Part 1: Modi Raj’s 4 Economic Reforms in 5 Years is Unflattering
Prime Minister Narendra Modi 1.0 is done. With the Model Code of Conduct for the general elections now in force, his first innings has effectively ended. As he pitches to get re-elected, we should call in his report card. Tune in to Raghav's Take!
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5 years ago
6 minutes

Raghav's Take
The Quint's editor-in-chief Raghav Bahl speaks on business, politics and policies.