
Abhishek Tripathy ଅଭିଷେକ ତ୍ରିପାଠୀ
3.5K posts

Abhishek Tripathy ଅଭିଷେକ ତ୍ରିପାଠୀ
@ateconoiima
PhD Candidate (Economics) @IIMAhmedabad | Local Governments | Financial Inclusion | Fan of @Arsenal and Test Cricket


No more ‘Tinku’, ‘Chhotu’, ‘Bablu’ or ‘Shaitaan’…. Rajasthan government launches scheme - Sarthak Naam Abhiyaan- to CORRECT ‘ inappropriate’ names. Only the Indian bureaucracy could draw up such a govt scheme of 3000 acceptable names. Acceptable names include ‘Akbar’, ‘Birbal’, ‘Vrindavan’. Amazing report in @htTweets today. By the way, Major Shaitan Singh, Paramveer Chakra winner and hero of Rezang La would have had to change his name if this scheme had been in existence then…..


The time Steve Irwin broke up a fight between two kookaburras by speaking their language


Newton's first law

Ahmedabad is not a sporting city, it never has been. That’s why every time there’s a final played there, more than 50% crowd is from outside the city. There’s no sporting culture, vibe. Just making the largest stadium might bring you gate revenues but it doesn’t bring you support or success for India.

This here is where Tottenham downfall started. Instead of focusing on your own team sitting at then 15th you celebrated city winning so they could stop Arsenal winning the league. Have fun getting relegated so you don’t care about Arsenal again.


The most important criterion for success is to focus on your goal.

🇳🇴 Lasse Kvigstad from Norwegian club Bryne received 100 eggs, 40 packs of oats and 20 litres of milk as his prize for being named Man of the Match. Well deserved! 🤣👏





Top BSNL official visit to Prayagraj: 50 junior officials tasked to ensure everything from luxury to bare essentials - even underwear Travel itinerary of a top BSNL employee's trip to Prayagraj gives a sneak peek into how this public sector telecom company went to the dogs. More than 50 staff have been tasked with arranging breakfast, lunch, escorts, and even Sangam "snan" kits with towels, undergarments, and hair oil.

"As a child of economists, I knew that economics was one field I must avoid," - economics laureate Abhijit Banerjee. "My father was a famously charismatic teacher, who adored and was much adored by his many students. He would often talk about just how brilliant some of them were, and it was clear to me that I had nothing to gain and much to lose by inviting comparisons with them. In my deeply anti-intellectual high school, it was made very clear that we should all aspire to study engineering or medicine because they led to good jobs (the lure of jobs in finance came many years later). They made an occasional exception, in the case of an unusually brilliant student, for studying physics. I had no desire to be an engineer or a doctor and prepping for physics required consorting with our physics teacher, a man who seemed to take genuine pleasure in inflicting pain. What else could I do? I loved literature and history, philosophy and math; my parents were against the first three. Their stated grounds were that I could always go from math to those at a later stage but not the reverse, though my guess now is that they were not sure that I was good enough to make a living in the humanities, given the shape of the labour market. In any case, their argument for math appealed to my instinct for trying to postpone all hard choices. Math it was going to be." Read Abhijit Banerjee's surprising biography: bit.ly/3u9Nl3j






