The quiet revolution of remote work , once celebrated as the inevitable future of labour, has unfolded into a far more tangled reality than imagined. For millions worldwide, the dream of flexible hours, zero commute, and working in pyjamas persists — yet in practice, far fewer actually enjoy its benefits. This growing gulf between aspiration and implementation reveals deeper issues: cultural inertia, managerial distrust, infrastructural gaps, gender burdens, and overlooked health costs . A Global Survey: Dreams vs. Reality The “ Global Survey of Working Arrangements ” (2024–25), jointly conducted by the Ifo Institute and Stanford University , paints a vivid picture. Over 16,000 college-educated workers across 40 countries were asked how many days they ideally want to work remotely and how many they actually do. In the U.S., U.K., and Canada , workers average 1.6 remote days per week , fairly close to their ideal. In Asia , it's just 1.1 days , even though workers want ...
By: Anand Gupta | July 2025 “Caste is not just a relic of the past; it is a living force in India’s everyday life. The 2026 caste census doesn’t just count people—it counts realities.” India’s upcoming 2026 caste census is already being hailed as a transformative moment in the country’s social and political history. But beyond the headlines about “reservation recalibration” and “data-driven policy,” this exercise could reshape the very constitutional foundations of how we understand backwardness , representation , and social justice . This blog explores the deeper implications of the caste census—legal, constitutional, and moral—and what it means for India’s democracy in the long run. What’s at Stake? Much of the current debate around the caste census is framed around one question: Will it lead to increased reservations for OBCs and other marginalized communities? But that’s just one layer. The constitutional stakes are much higher. The 2026 Census will: Trigger reallocation...