Public Policy India’s credo is to inform and educate the public. Founded on April 1, 2012, Public Policy India’s maxim is analysis
of news and business models from the perspective of public policy. The reports it publishes is hoped to accelerate the progress of humanity and society.
Facts are Sacred—remain Public Policy India’s guiding principle. A qualified and experienced team of analysts, diligent researchers and seasoned editors
together offer a rare insight into India’s economy. The reports cover the challenges and business opportunities in each sector of the economy and successful
case studies of public policy initiatives that marry business with social objectives.
Public Policy India’s Insight Reports carry information of the kind that poet Ezra Pound put as “news that stays news”. The subscribers include CEOs of top Indian companies and MNCs,
libraries of academic institutions, top B-schools in India, engineering colleges, law firms, research organizations, internationally acclaimed NGOs and some UN organizations.
Read More
Unbelievable, but true—the majority of honey sold in India by reputed companies is adulterated with sugar syrup or Fake Honey.
It’s weird about Fake Honey . Why would one kill a goose that lays golden eggs? But then the story of adulteration of honey is not much different—it reveals a clever, but short-sighted ploy that plays havoc with nature’s biodiversity. As a consequence, it impacts not just the health of individuals, but beekeepers’ livelihoods and the food ecosystem.
Endowed with rich medicinal benefits, the raw honey carries an array of plant chemicals that function as antioxidants, which aid in protecting one’s body from cell damage due to free radicals. Honey has higher fructose than glucose. What differentiates it from other “sugars” is that it also has a range of excellent enzymes, which decompose the sugars efficiently. These enzymes come from the plant or from the bees.
In COVID-19: The doctors can now attend to providing good clinical care.
An unusual gloom elbowed the spirit of spring this year. Even though invisible, the tiny virus has derided hope as well as optimism. It has pushed the human race under the glare of fear—either of infection or of dying. In India, as of July 24, the virus has caused 30601 deaths.
The novel corona virus appeared in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organisation declared it a pandemic on March 11. Indian government imposed a lockdown, the first of many, from March 25. Sadly, it brought to the surface the challenges of India’s medical infrastructure.