What was the argument the supreme court used to reject the bankruptcy code? Was something like, "God has ordained that this business should employ this person into perpetuity because he's an Indian citizen."
No offence. But I find it utterly ridiculous that judges in Bangladesh are sent to be trained in India. It's like sending an economist to be trained in North Korea.
Honestly I would have simply wanted a constitutional amendment that freezes tax rates for 5 years and all tax changes will take 2 years to come into effect. That's a cheap way (politically speaking) to improve ease of doing business.
What was the argument the supreme court used to reject the bankruptcy code? Was something like, "God has ordained that this business should employ this person into perpetuity because he's an Indian citizen."
No offence. But I find it utterly ridiculous that judges in Bangladesh are sent to be trained in India. It's like sending an economist to be trained in North Korea.
Honestly, considering the state of the judiciary, I wouldn't be surprised if it was.
Honestly I would have simply wanted a constitutional amendment that freezes tax rates for 5 years and all tax changes will take 2 years to come into effect. That's a cheap way (politically speaking) to improve ease of doing business.