RupyaOff

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RupyaOff

RupyaOff

@rupyaoff

Helping your salary survive.

Katılım Mayıs 2026
8 Takip Edilen7 Takipçiler
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Nalini Unagar
Nalini Unagar@NalinisKitchen·
This is Guneet Singh Talwar. He shared a harsh reality about Mumbai dreams. A 2BHK in Mumbai costs around ₹2 to 3 crores, while India’s top 1% earn around ₹3 lakhs per month. Based on that logic, even if you make it into the top 1% in India, it would still take you around 8 years to afford a 2BHK in Mumbai. Meanwhile, a 2BHK in New York costs around ₹5 crores, and top 1% earners there make about ₹8 crores a year. So it would take only about 6 months to afford a 2BHK in New York. This is not a struggle of the middle class. This is the struggle for the top 1%. Now imagine the reality for the middle class. For a tea seller, a delivery partner, or a teacher, buying a 2BHK even in an average area of Mumbai is almost impossible. 99% of people are dreaming of something that is almost impossible to achieve. We have cheap labour here, and this is one of the reasons why so many people choose to leave the country and settle abroad.
Nalini Unagar tweet mediaNalini Unagar tweet media
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
Some people budget with excel sheets Some people budget by staring at their bank balance for 7 seconds and deciding whether the vibe feels financially safe or not. #Budgeting #Finance #savings
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
Being financially responsible in 2026 is basically just resisting 47 different apps trying to convince you to spend money every single day. We’re trying to make that a little easier at rupyaoff.com
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
The funniest part about “treating yourself” culture is that people are stressed about money while constantly rewarding themselves with things they don’t actually need.
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RupyaOff retweetledi
MOHINI WEALTH (NRI)
MOHINI WEALTH (NRI)@MohiniWealth·
🚨 SHOCKING TRUTH: Anant Ambani's ₹750 Ice Cream is PROOF India is DOOMED to Stay Poor Forever? The Dark Secret No One Dares Say! Hey friends, stop everything. While you're struggling with ₹50 ice cream cones in this crazy heat, Anant Ambani – son of Asia's richest man – just launched Vantara Creamery selling scoops for a jaw-dropping ₹750 each. Yes, you read that right. Seven hundred and fifty rupees for one scoop of fancy ice cream. The internet is exploding with memes, anger, and questions. But here's the real bombshell: This isn't just about rich people flaunting luxury. It's the deadly symptom of why India keeps failing to build real tech giants like China. We're trapped in a dangerous illusion. The Ice Cream Empire While the Nation Starves for Innovation Think about it. The Ambani family has unlimited money, power, and brains. They could pour resources into AI that changes the world, semiconductors that make India independent, or batteries to crush Tesla. Instead? Premium ice cream targeted at the super-rich. Why? Because in today's India, selling fancy scoops, protein powders, or hair oil makes way more money with zero risk than betting on hard tech. One viral Instagram post, beautiful packaging, and boom – cash flows in weeks. Deep tech? It takes 7-10 years, massive risk, and government red tape that kills dreams. This is controversial, but someone has to say it: Our entire startup culture is a massive scam. We brag about having over 2 lakh startups. Sounds impressive, right? Wrong. Less than 1% work on real future tech like AI, chips, or biotech. The rest? Shampoos, popcorn brands, and food delivery apps. Shark Tank India is basically a D2C fashion and food show at this point. The Heartbreaking Reality of India's "Tech" Unicorns India has 117 unicorns worth billions. Their total patents? Just around 2,129. Shockingly, over 110 of them have ZERO patents. Zero! Compare that to real tech companies abroad that file hundreds every year. Our biggest "tech" firms are actually delivery apps and e-commerce. Engineers from IITs – the best brains in the country – are delivering Swiggy and Zomato orders because the pay is better and faster than risky startups. This is heartbreaking. We're wasting our demographic dividend on gig work. China? They're building BYD electric cars, TikTok-level apps, and dominating semiconductors. India? We're busy copying foreign tech and paying them $14.3 billion every year in royalties just to use their inventions. That's money leaving our country while we sell ice cream. Zoho tried to build semiconductors – a massive ₹3,500 crore project. They had to shelve it because finding real tech partners in India is nearly impossible. Even big corporates run away from deep tech. Why This System is Broken (And How It's Keeping India Down) India's economy has three layers: - Top 15 crore rich people who buy ₹750 ice cream - Middle 30 crore aspirational folks loving convenience apps - Bottom 100+ crore fighting daily survival The system rewards quick consumer wins over long-term nation-building. Foreign companies laugh all the way to the bank as we import their tech and export our talent. This isn't hating on Ambani – they are brilliant businessmen playing the game perfectly. The real villain is our broken incentive structure that makes ice cream the smartest bet. We say we want an Indian Elon Musk. But our ecosystem rewards the guy selling overpriced dessert instead. The Wake-Up Call We Desperately Need India has the talent. We have the population. We have ambition. But we're stuck in "trader mode" instead of "builder mode." Real change needs: - Massive rewards and protection for deep tech risk-takers - Education that teaches invention, not just dropshipping tricks - Government buying Indian tech first - Culture that celebrates patents more than valuations Until then, expect more ₹750 ice creams while China builds the future. What do you think? Is Anant Ambani's ice cream a smart business move or a national embarrassment? Drop your hot takes below – let's debate this like our future depends on it (because it does). Like, share, and subscribe if you want more truth bombs on India's real challenges. Turn on notifications – the next one might hit even harder.
MOHINI WEALTH (NRI) tweet media
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
I am begging you atp 😭😭😭
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
The craziest thing about modern spending habits is that people don’t even wait to have money anymore before buying things. Everything is: pay later, EMI, credit, “future me will handle it”. Could you imagine the concept of taking an EMI to buy expensive shoes 10 years ago ?
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
@Akshat_World Big difference between cutting expenses and cutting 'useless' expenses. The people who figure this out and the importance of actively investing a portion of their incomes at all times are the ones who will survive this turbulent market
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Akshat Shrivastava
Akshat Shrivastava@Akshat_World·
0 people got rich by cutting their expenses. To get rich, you need to grow income. This applies at a national level too. Zoom out and look:- 1) India is asking to cut: let rupee fall, buy less foreign goods, don't buy gold, don't travel abroad etc We are basically cutting (except for taxes of course) 2) US is asking to speculate. Circular financing in AI, IR cuts talks, collab with China etc. Both the markets are great. But, one is cutting while the other is building more leverage. How you play this is a good test of investing :)
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
@Akshat_World @sabeer The blueprint is right there ! We were the fastest rising IT hub of the world. Go back to those roots. Not every idea has to be a different gig enabling venture ! Lot's of scope in the finance sector ngl. Personal financing apps have lot's of potential
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Akshat Shrivastava
Akshat Shrivastava@Akshat_World·
@sabeer What type of businesses do you think Indian entrepreneurs should look to start?
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Sabeer Bhatia
Sabeer Bhatia@sabeer·
Dhandha culture has taken over the nation. A large percentage of new startups seem to be some variation of trading, brokerage, delivery, arbitrage or reselling rather than creating fundamentally new technologies or inventions. Have we optimized an entire generation for commerce instead of curiosity? Is the education system partly to blame for producing job seekers and traders rather than inventors, scientists and creators?
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
@sabeer Even the creators at this point are just coming up with new variations of the same app that delivers or carries something. We are at a point where the vast chunk of new ideas have something to do with the gig economy. Innovation is genuinely in shambles.
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
People used to physically feel money leaving their wallet. Now your entire salary disappears through notifications 😭😭😭💀 #PersonalFinance #UPI #Savings
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
Nobody really notices how much money they spend online anymore. UPI removed the pain of spending and apps got very good at making impulsive purchases feel normal. That’s exactly the kind of thing we’re trying to solve at rupyaoff.com #SmartSpending #UPI #Finance
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
@Shaadmaaner Been there, done that ! Please stay glued to your phones.
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Shaad
Shaad@Shaadmaaner·
@rupyaoff I wish I was tracking my expenses. Now I'm homeless. Please release this asap
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
Modern spending habits are crazy. Food delivery, Blinkit, random online purchases, “small” UPI spends that somehow end up draining your salary before month-end. That’s exactly why we started RupyaOff. Trying to make spending online a little smarter. More to follow.
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RupyaOff
RupyaOff@rupyaoff·
UPI made spending feel a little too easy. One Blinkit order here, one late night food delivery there, and suddenly your salary is gone before month-end. Trying to make online spending a little smarter at RupyaOff. rupyaoff.com
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