India’s major airlines, Air India, IndiGo, and SpiceJet, have opposed a new government rule requiring them to offer at least 60% of…
Indian rupee fell below ₹93 per US dollar, marking an all-time low that has caught the attention of both investors and everyday…
The Centre has rolled out a ₹497-crore relief package to support exporters struggling due to the ongoing crisis in West Asia. The…
Global oil prices have risen sharply, crossing $110 per barrel, as tensions grow in the Middle East. The increase comes after fresh…
The Indian rupee declined by 3 paise to 92.43 against the US dollar in early trading on Wednesday, reflecting pressure from a…
India and the United States are close to finalising an interim trade agreement, but the deal will only be formally signed after…
With tensions rising in West Asia and concerns growing over the safety of global shipping routes, the Indian Navy has stepped in…
The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has increased the price of the FASTag Annual Pass for private vehicles. Starting April 1,…
External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar has said India has not reached a “blanket arrangement” with Iran to ensure the passage of Indian-flagged…
The Union government announced the creation of a ₹1 lakh crore Economic Stabilisation Fund (ESF) to help India withstand sudden global economic…
The budget cycle never really ends in India. Between Union Cabinet approvals, state government procurement deals, oil pricing decisions, and the RBI's quiet interventions in the currency market, there is always something moving. The Business section at The Summary follows this beat — not just what was announced, but why it happened, and what it changes.
The coverage is broad by necessity. India's economic decisions don't sit neatly in one lane. A Rafale procurement deal is also a foreign exchange story. A state government signing an MoU with L&T for ₹18,600 crore is also a signal about credit availability and regional industrial ambition. Treating these as isolated press releases misses the point.
The central government is the single largest actor in the Indian economy, and its spending choices reflect political priorities as clearly as economic ones. PM Modi's ₹22,000 crore development push across Gujarat, Daman & Diu, and Lakshadweep landed days before a key electoral cycle — that context belongs in the story, not in a footnote. Similarly, a cabinet-approved ₹10,000 crore aviation safety fund is partly about infrastructure and partly about shoring up a sector the government cannot afford to let fail. This section reports both.
Fuel pricing in India is never purely a market story. LPG revisions, E85 ethanol rollouts, and high-level energy diplomacy — like Modi's discussions with Venezuelan Energy Minister Delcy Rodriguez — are shaped by subsidy politics, import bills, and supply chain strategy simultaneously. Readers following India's energy economy need all three threads, and this section keeps them together.
A rupee at 95.64 to the dollar doesn't happen in isolation. It reflects the current account, portfolio investor sentiment, and RBI's intervention appetite. When the government removes capital gains tax on foreign sovereign bond investment, that too is part of the same picture — an effort to bring in long-term capital to manage exactly these pressures. The Business section covers markets not as scoreboards but as consequences of policy decisions made upstream.
The 114 Rafale deal matters here because it involves billions in foreign exchange outflow, offset obligations that determine how much of that money comes back into Indian manufacturing, and the broader question of whether India's defence industrial base is actually being built or just promised. These are economic questions. The strategic rationale is someone else's beat.
Government economic policy, public sector spending, infrastructure investment, energy pricing, currency markets, and large corporate or procurement deals. The emphasis is on decisions with real economic weight — cabinet approvals, state-level funding agreements, regulatory changes, and market movements that affect how money flows through the Indian economy.
Most outlets publish the announcement. This section is more interested in what the announcement means — who benefits, what changed to make it happen, and what it signals about the government's current economic priorities. The stories are shorter than a wire report but carry more usable context.
Where it intersects directly with India, yes. Currency pressures from the dollar index, bilateral energy agreements, defence procurement from France — these aren't foreign news stories, they're Indian economic stories with an international dimension. The distinction matters.
As events occur. There are no fixed publishing windows. Policy announcements, market shifts, and major deals are covered when they happen. If a story is still developing, follow-up coverage comes as facts are confirmed rather than on a schedule.
Both, without compromise in either direction. LPG prices and infrastructure spending are covered so that any reader understands the significance. Policy and market analysis is rigorous enough for professionals. The standard is clarity, not simplification.
Not as primary coverage. The section focuses on macro-level economic activity — government policy, large-scale industry, capital markets. Startup and MSME news appears when it connects to a broader policy shift, a regulatory change, or a funding environment story that affects the sector as a whole.