Aashish Chandorkar Bloomberg
- All
- News
-
An Economic Rebound Can Help Government In Elections Next Year
- Thursday May 13, 2021
- Business | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg Opinion
A recent Credit Suisse study talked about how 100 unicorns - firms with more than $1 billion valuation - have sprung up in India in just a few years
- www.ndtv.com/business
-
Opinion: When India, The Pharmacy Of The World, Needs Prescriptions
- Wednesday April 14, 2021
- Opinion | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg
On April 11, India recorded almost 170,000 Covid-19 cases, a record for the country since the start of the pandemic.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Opinion: How Do You Take 1.3 Billion People To The Bank?
- Monday March 15, 2021
- Opinion | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg
In the futurist law now named after him, the late Stanford University computer scientist Roy Amara once declared, "We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate the effect in the long run." India's public digital infrastructure - in many ways, an immense online bureaucracy - is an outlier to this principle.
- www.ndtv.com
-
An Economic Rebound Can Help Government In Elections Next Year
- Thursday May 13, 2021
- Business | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg Opinion
A recent Credit Suisse study talked about how 100 unicorns - firms with more than $1 billion valuation - have sprung up in India in just a few years
- www.ndtv.com/business
-
Opinion: When India, The Pharmacy Of The World, Needs Prescriptions
- Wednesday April 14, 2021
- Opinion | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg
On April 11, India recorded almost 170,000 Covid-19 cases, a record for the country since the start of the pandemic.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Opinion: How Do You Take 1.3 Billion People To The Bank?
- Monday March 15, 2021
- Opinion | Aashish Chandorkar, Bloomberg
In the futurist law now named after him, the late Stanford University computer scientist Roy Amara once declared, "We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate the effect in the long run." India's public digital infrastructure - in many ways, an immense online bureaucracy - is an outlier to this principle.
- www.ndtv.com