Skip to main content

Member of Parliament (MP) in India

Monthly Salary: 12,000
Expense for Constitution per month: 10,000
Office expenditure per month: 14,000

Traveling concession (Rs. 8 per km): 48,000 ( For a visit to Delhi & return: 6000 km)

Daily BATA during parliament meets : 500

Charge for 1 class (A/C) in train : Free
(For any number of times - All over India)

Charge for Business Class in flights : Free for 40 trips / year
(With wife or PA)

Rent for MP hostel at Delhi: Free

Electricity costs at home: Free up to 50,000 units

Local phone call charge: Free up to 1,70,000 calls.

TOTAL expense for a MP per year: 32,00,000

TOTAL expense for 5 years : 1,60,00,000

For 534 MPs, the expense for 5 years : 8,54,40,00,000 (nearly 855 cores)
(Note: The above expenditure is excluding the bribery & Scandals)
And they are elected by THE PEOPLE OF INDIA, by the largest demoCRAZY in the world, not intruded into the parliament on their own or by any qualification.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Top 10 Arts Colleges in INDIA

Infrastructure as Code (IaC)

What does infrastructure as code mean? Infrastructure as Code (IaC) is a method to provision and manage IT infrastructure through the use of source code, rather than through standard operating procedures and manual processes. You’re basically treating the servers, databases, networks, and other infrastructure like software. And this code can help you configure and deploy these infrastructure components quickly and consistently. In the past, setting up IT infrastructure has been a very manual process. Humans have to physically rack and stack servers. Then this hardware has to be manually configured to the requirements and settings of the operating system used and application that’s being hosted. Finally, the application has to be deployed to the hardware. Only then can your application be launched. Ugh. With IaC, you can use tools like Terraform, CloudFormation, Puppet, Chef, and other tools to create scripts that will configure your servers, databases, operating systems, and ...

Seven Blunders of the World

Seven Blunders of the World is a list that Mahatma Gandhi gave to his grandson Arun Gandhi, written on a piece of paper, on their final day together, not too long before his assassination. The seven blunders are: Wealth without work Pleasure without conscience Knowledge without character Commerce without morality Science without humanity Worship without sacrifice Politics without principle This list grew from Gandhi's search for the roots of violence. He called these acts of passive violence. Preventing these is the best way to prevent oneself or one's society from reaching a point of violence.