
Sri Triveni School felicitates SSC toppers
Hyderabad: Sri Triveni Group of Schools celebrated Achievers' Day with great enthusiasm, honouring academic excellence and welcoming new beginnings. The event recognised the exceptional performance of students M Jaya Hamsini (589/600), Md Adil (587/600), who excelled in the SSC Public examinations with cash awards of Rs 35,000 each and Neetu Simha (580/600), N Manasvi (578/600) G Harshini Reddy (577/600), Md Hashmath Zeshaan (576/600) were presented with cash awards of Rs 25,000 each.
A warm welcome and orientation session for the parents of the newly joined students was also held, offering insights into the school's vision, ethos, and academic approach.

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The Wire
9 minutes ago
- The Wire
Why India Needs to Update Its Own Poverty Line
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While the verdict is out on whether the new methodology of collecting data that was adopted in Household Consumption Expenditure Surveys (HCES) of 2022 and 2023 captures consumption better, what is not in doubt is that this data are now not comparable with the previous rounds of consumption expenditure. While the World Bank has considered the change in the recall period and adjusted for that while comparing with 2011-12 (from URP to MMRP), the HCES changed not just the recall period but the entire way in which data were collected – with multiple visits to each household and changes in the questionnaire. While there have been some validation exercises to understand what the impact of these changes are in comparing trends, no official national estimates have been released so far on what the poverty rates are based on these new surveys. PPP estimates of the ICP are also known to have their methodological issues which are too complex to discuss here. 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What is required therefore in India is an urgent exercise at updating our own poverty line – this was something that was under the remit of the erstwhile Planning Commission. The NITI Aayog must now take this on. The expert committee must develop a methodology that robustly measures poverty, grounded in a normative understanding of the basic minimum standards we, as a country, believe every citizen should have access to. In the absence of such an exercise, the old poverty ratios are still being used for making crucial allocations to states for programmes such as the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP) through which social security pensions for the elderly, single women and disabled are disbursed. Further, it is important to remember that poverty ratios derived from consumption-expenditure-based poverty lines represent only one dimension of well-being. To gain a comprehensive understanding of the realities of people's lives, a broader set of indicators must be considered. These include employment status, real wage trends, health and education outcomes, food security and nutritional status, as well as income and wealth inequality, among others. Taken together, these dimensions provide a more holistic picture of well-being – and on many of these fronts, both national and international estimates indicate that India still has a significant distance to cover. Dipa Sinha is a development economist. The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments. Make a contribution to Independent Journalism Related News Reality Check: Beyond Statistics, is Poverty Actually Reducing in India? 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News18
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AP NMMS Result 2025 Released: How To Download, Check Direct Link Here
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Indian Express
an hour ago
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