Before investing, you should consider your financial goals, risk tolerance, and investment horizon. Based on your investment objectives, you can choose among different investment options such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, real estate, or a combination of these.
Has published many of the articles n many newspapers like kathmandu post, the hamilayan times and many more.
Monday, 3 April 2023
Before investing
Saturday, 11 February 2023
How to promote our economic
Nepalese government has been working to promote economic growth, improve the investment climate, and address challenges such as corruption, political instability, and limited access to finance. The government has also been focusing on infrastructure development, particularly in the areas of transportation, energy, and tourism, to support economic growth and create new job opportunities.
In terms of politics, the country has been working to establish the new federal democratic republic and to build stronger institutions that are more representative and accountable to the people. This has involved addressing issues such as political polarization, ensuring the rule of law, and promoting good governance.
It's worth noting that these reforms take time and can face challenges, but the Nepalese government and people are working together to build a better future for the country.
Nepalese government has been working to promote economic growth, improve the investment climate, and address challenges such as corruption, political instability, and limited access to finance. The government has also been focusing on infrastructure development, particularly in the areas of transportation, energy, and tourism, to support economic growth and create new job opportunities.
In terms of politics, the country has been working to establish the new federal democratic republic and to build stronger institutions that are more representative and accountable to the people. This has involved addressing issues such as political polarization, ensuring the rule of law, and promoting good governance.
It's worth noting that these reforms take time and can face challenges, but the Nepalese government and people are working together to build a better future for the country.
Sunday, 29 January 2023
Political Life
Political Life
The country is divided administratively into fourteen zones and seventy-five districts. Local and district-level administers answer to national ministries that are guided by policies set by a bicameral legislature made up of a House of Representatives and a National Council. The majority party in the House of Representatives appoints the prime minister. The executive branch consists of the king and the Council of Ministers.
Leadership and Political Officials.The government is plagued by corruption, and officials often rely on bribes to supplement their income. It is widely believed that influence and employment in government are achieved through personal and family connections. The king is viewed with ambivalence. He and his family have been criticized for corruption and political repression, but photos of the royal family are a popular symbol of national identity and many people think of the king as the living embodiment of the nation and an avatar of the god Vishnu.
Social Problems and Control.International attention has focused on the plight of girls who have been lured or abducted from villages to work as prostitutes in Indian cities and child laborers in carpet factories. Prostitution has increased the spread of AIDS. Foreign boycotts of Nepali carpets have helped curb the use of child labor but have not addressed the larger social problems that force children to become family wage earners.
Military Activity.The military is small and poorly equipped. Its primary purpose is to reinforce the police in maintaining domestic stability. Some Royal Nepal Army personnel have served in United Nations peacekeeping forces. A number of Nepalis, particularly of the hill ethnic groups, have served in Gurkha regiments. To many villagers, service in the British Army represents a significant economic opportunity, and in some areas soldiers' remittances support the local economy.
Read more: https://missionpudaini.blogspot.com
Friday, 27 January 2023
Population Growth in Nepal by Region, 1991-2001
Population Growth in Nepal by Region, 1991-2001
July 2002) Wedged between the world’s two population billionaires, China and India, Nepal is struggling with its own population pressures. The country’s 23 million people, most of whom make their living from farming, have nearly run out of land to cultivate, while their numbers continue to grow; poverty, the highest outside of Africa, persists; and internal conflict is draining already scarce resources.
Nepal’s 10th population census, conducted in June 2001, produced a population count of 23,214,681. That number marked an increase of 5 million since the previous census in 1991 and an average annual growth rate of 2.3 percent. According to the census, 86 percent of this growing population lives in rural areas, and 82 percent of the economically active population works in agriculture, fishing, or forestry.
Because one-third of the country consists of mountains or hills, little additional land is available to tend. The share of land being cultivated rose from 17 percent in 1974 to 30 percent in 1998, and the remaining areas that could be added consist mostly of slopes and marginal lands that are environmentally sensitive and less productive.
With population growth exceeding growth in agricultural production for the past three decades, poverty has become a fixture. Nepal is the poorest country in the world outside of Africa: With an annual gross national income per capita in 1999 of US$220, it ranked 164th out of 173 countries for which data were available. Even when income figures are adjusted to reflect the local cost of living, Nepal rises to only 134th out of 158 countries, higher only than neighboring Bhutan and the poorest African countries. The poverty rate in the country has remained at the same level for as long as it has been measured. According to the first Multi-Purpose Household Budget Survey in 1984-1985, 42 percent of the population was poor, and the most recent Nepal Living Standards Survey, conducted in 1995-1996, matched that percentage, although the methodologies may not be strictly comparable.
To combat poverty, the country has implemented a series of five-year economic development plans, the ninth of which ends this year. The current plan has made population management a central development goal, setting objectives of moving toward a two-child family norm and bringing fertility to replacement level — the level at which a couple has only enough children to replace themselves, or about two children per couple — within 20 years. The 2001 Demographic and Health Survey showed that the current total fertility rate or average number of children per woman is 4.1. In March, Nepal’s parliament legalized abortion to reduce maternal mortality. The maternal mortality ratio, 830 per 100,000 live births, is the fourth highest in the world outside of Africa.
Beyond promoting smaller families, the government has been redistributing poor, landless people to less densely populated areas of the terai, or plains (the lowest of the three topographical bands shown in the accompanying map). The terai contain the majority of the country’s arable land.
Since the advent of malaria-control measures in the 1950s, the terai have been the major region of population growth due to migration from the hill and mountain regions (see table). Outside of the terai, the fastest growing region in the country has been the capital city of Kathmandu, whose population exceeded 1 million people for the first time in the 2001 census. Yet government efforts to address population and to promote overall economic development have come under threat. Since 1996, Maoist rebels have been trying to overthrow Nepal’s multiparty democracy and constitutional monarchy to establish a totalitarian communist republic. They have attempted to exploit the young and the poor in remote rural regions, and the violent clashes between them and the government have severely crippled the tourism industry, one of Nepal’s major sources of foreign currency.
With a young population — 42 percent of people were under age 15 in 1991 — the country will continue to grow rapidly. Even if past fertility declines continue, the Ministry of Population and Environment still projects that the population will reach 32 million by 2016. In light of that increase, the prospects for economic growth and political stability appear fragile.
Saturday, 21 January 2023
Commercial banks reducing deposit interest rates from next week
Commercial banks reducing deposit interest rates from next week.
Kathmandu , Nepal Rastra Bank
Nepal Bankers’ Association, an organisation of managers of commercial banks, has decided to reduce interest rates on deposits beginning from coming Sunday.
A recent meeting of the association decided to lower the rates within the limits set by the Nepal Rastra Bank, informs the association’s president Sunil KC.
So far, the banks have been giving interest at a maximum rate of 12.13 per cent on individual deposits and of 10.13 per cent on institutional interests. Now, in effect from next week, they will go down.
Whereas the rates of interest on deposits will go down immediately, it will take three months to reduce rates of interest on loans, according to the association.
Friday, 20 January 2023
The Economy Of Nepal US Times
There are several ways to potentially increase the economy of Nepal:
Developing tourism: Nepal is known for its natural beauty, including the Himalayas, and promoting tourism could bring in significant revenue for the country.
Improving infrastructure: Developing infrastructure, such as roads, airports, and telecommunications, could make it easier for businesses to operate and attract foreign investment.
Encouraging foreign investment: Nepal could attract foreign investors by offering tax incentives and a stable political and economic environment.
Developing agriculture: Agriculture is a major sector of the Nepali economy, and investing in technology and education to improve agricultural productivity could lead to economic growth.
Boosting the manufacturing and service sectors: The Government could also focus on developing the manufacturing and service sectors as it creates more job opportunities and diversify the economy.
Leveraging the potential of hydroelectricity: Nepal is rich in water resources and has a huge potential for hydroelectricity. Developing this sector could lead to significant economic growth.
Expanding trade: Nepal could expand trade with neighboring countries and other nations to increase exports and generate more revenue for the economy.
It's worth noting that these are only some of the possible ways to increase the economy of Nepal, and the implementation of these strategies would require careful consideration of the country's unique political and economic environment.
Friday, 13 January 2023
Nepal's war and political transition: a brief history
Nepal's war and political transition: a brief history.
Nepal’s war and political transition: a brief history
From 1846, the king of Nepal was reduced to a largely titular role after military officer Jung Bahadur Rana seized power in a coup, ushering in a prolonged era of hereditary rule by successive Rana prime ministers. The end of the Rana era a hundred years later came about through an armed uprising spearheaded by the recently formed Nepali Congress (NC) political party. But the 1951 Interim Constitution allowed the space for the monarchy to reassert itself.
After a brief interlude of democratic rule in 1959–60, King Mahendra took over and banned all political parties. A new constitution decreed by Mahendra in 1962 introduced the partyless ‘Panchayat’ political system – ostensibly a ‘Nepali’ version of democracy that in reality concentrated power in the palace. In 1990, a popular movement led to a return to multiparty democracy and a new constitution. The first ‘People’s Movement’ was led by a coalition of political parties that included both the NC and the ‘larger left movement’. But the failure to institute more fundamental reforms dismayed some members of the more radical left.
War
The launch of the ‘People’s War’ on 13 February 1996 by the Communist Party of Nepal–Maoist (CPN-M) was a violent expression of dissatisfaction with the pace, extent and direction of social and political change. Senior Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai famously asserted that it was aimed at ‘establishing a new socio-economic system and state’. The Maoists’ 40-Point Demands presented to the government in the run-up to the war had called for an end to discrimination against women and of all class exploitation and prejudice – including the Hindu system of ‘untouchability’.
The Maoists’ social reform agenda and armed insurrection techniques attracted support from many impoverished people in the outlying hills and mountainous areas. Fighting remained relatively low-level until the end of the 1990s,and the government’s response was also initially restricted to deploying the police rather than the military. Increasing awareness of ethnic inequality and discrimination fuelled the insurgency. The entry of the Royal Nepali Army in late 2001 was accompanied by a massive increase in violence. Ceasefires in 2001 and 2003 both collapsed.
In 2002, King Gyanendra dismissed the elected government and assumed direct political control before seizing absolute power in February 2005. This led Nepali political parties across the spectrum to join to form the Seven-Party Alliance (SPA), and together they began serious discussions with the insurgent CPN-M. With the support of New Delhi, the Maoists and the SPA settled on a 12-Point Understanding in November 2005, which accepted parts of the stated Maoist agenda of social justice and state reform.
Comprehensive Peace Accord
In the spring of 2006 diverse sections of society and political actors joined in a mass mobilisation – the second People’s Movement. Daily rallies and demonstrations took place across the country for 19 days until King Gyanendra restored the parliament. Along with the return to power of the SPA, this triggered a succession of significant events: the end of all royal prerogatives; the declaration of Nepal as a secular country; the adoption of a ceasefire; the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Accord (CPA) between the SPA-led government and the Maoists; the adoption of the Interim Constitution; and the entry of the CPN-M into the newly renamed Legislature-Parliament.
As well as marking the official end to violence, the CPA dealt with issues of social and political transformation and inclusion. In particular, Clause 3.5 states that: ‘In order to end discriminations based on class, ethnicity, language, gender, culture, religion and region and to address the problems of women, Dalit, indigenous people, ethnic minorities (Janajatis), Tarai communities (Madhesis), oppressed, neglected and minority communities and the backward areas by deconstructing the current centralised and unitary structure, the state shall be restructured in an inclusive, democratic and forward looking manner.’
Following the appointment by the United Nations of first a special envoy and then an Office of the Personal Representative of the Secretary-General, the UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) was set up in 2007 with the mandate to ‘monitor the management of arms and armies’ (ie the Nepali Army and the Maoist army), and to provide electoral observation for the first CA election.
Post-war transition
The Interim Constitution adopted in January 2007 referred to secularism and republicanism, but not federalism. The Madhes Movement, a major protest by groups representing the Madhesi populations predominant in Nepal’s southern Tarai plains, began almost immediately, leading to the amendment of the Interim Constitution to restructure Nepal along federal lines. Federalism was associated with devolution of power and greater political representation of marginalised groups. The electoral system was also amended after the second Madhes Movement a year later, to allow for a higher degree of proportional representation.
The Maoists emerged as the largest party in the election to the first Constituent Assembly (CA) in April 2008. They formed a government with the Communist Party of Nepal–Unified Marxist-Leninist (UML), traditionally one of Nepal’s two largest parties along with the NC, and the new Madhes-based parties.
UNMIN formally exited Nepal in January 2011 under growing resistance from the Nepali Army, the bureaucracy, and the NC and the UML, with the fate of the Maoist fighters in cantonments still unresolved. But the Joint Monitoring Coordination Committee (JMCC) that UNMIN headed had helped build trust between representatives of all sides involved in overseeing the armies. In early 2012, the Maoist People’s Liberation Army, by now confined to cantonments for over six years, was finally disbanded.
2015 earthquakes
Following the devastating earthquakes of April and May 2015, the three major political parties – the NC, the UML and the UCPN-M – along with the largest Madhesi party, in the second CA the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum-Democratic (MJF-D), decided to fast-track the constitution.
July to September 2015 saw significant protests by major social groups as the new constitution began to take shape. Women’s groups protested citizenship laws. Madhesi, Tharu and Janajati groups variously demanded demarcation of states and then the arrangement of delineation itself, challenged the exclusivist nature of the decision-making process, and disputed the withdrawal of provisions from the Interim Constitution relating to greater inclusion and proportional representation. The constitution was ultimately promulgated in September 2015 amid mass protests in the Tarai and threatened shutdowns in eastern Nepal and elsewhere. At least 46 people were killed in five weeks of unrest in August and September 2015.
The constitution was amended in January 2016 to ensure a higher degree of inclusion. The government introduced a second constitutional amendment proposal in November 2016 that sought to allay some of the concerns relating to provincial demarcation, although protests erupted almost immediately in affected districts and at the time of writing the amendment had yet to be passed.
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