Among them was the Tatas' expansion programme.
The Tatas' cost of production was high
The Tatas built a whole city called Jamshedpur;
Though the Tatas had come of age,
For the Tatas, what came out of it was perhaps learning.
and a labour strike in 1928 rendered the Tatas' position vulnerable.
But the Tatas too had doubled its capacity in the meanwhile,
Bhilai to 3.2 million tonnes; the Tatas to 3 million tonnes;
In view of the limited demand, the Tatas, who supplied steel sheets,
100,000 tons of steel, the Tatas were assured of a ready market.
As a result the Tatas had the MEP dovetailed into a larger 2
The story of the Tatas during the war years was one of continuous
Mr. Mistry had always mentioned that the Tatas should honour all commitments within the law.
there was no expansion of capacity, and Tatas still continued to be the only major
The Tariff Board( 1934) estimated that the Tatas had increased their share of the Indian market
The government first approved in April 1963 the Tatas' expansion by 1 million tonnes during the(
There was also a fall in the internal demand,
and a labour strike in 1928 rendered the Tatas' position vulnerable.
The Tatas built a whole city called Jamshedpur;
and created a model for the integrated townships of the post- 1947 public sector.
Whichever government comes to power, it works only to enrich the Tatas, Birlas, Ambanis
and other Indian and foreign big monopoly capitalists.
The small businesses don't understand that some of the big businesses
are doing totally ethical work like the Tatas, Infosys or Wipro.
If the Ambanis and Tatas are allowed to enter freely into contracts of buying,
selling or renting land, why not a farmer?
It has been claimed on behalf of the Tatas that the Company more than repaid the nation for the protection it received.
Unemployment is growing rapidly,
and the peasantry is being ruined, while the Tatas, Ambanis, Birlas
and other capitalist monopoly houses have grown enormously rich.
With a 10-year commitment to the event, the Tatas have shown us yet again their commitment to give back
to the society through sport.
The major reason behind this sale was that the Tatas realised the huge growth potential of the retail industry in India,
even during the 90s.
When the Tatas, Birlas, Reliance
or some other capitalist monopoly house approaches a bank, the senior-most management team headed by the CEO welcomes and salutes them.
The Tariff Board( 1934) estimated that the Tatas had increased their share of the Indian market
from 30 per cent in 1927 to 72 per cent in 1934.
But the Tatas too had doubled its capacity in the meanwhile,
and added to its empire the Indian Tube Company, the largest tube- making plant in the country.