Indian Railway Classification: Difference between revisions
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<sup>1</sup> ''Lakh'' in the Indian numbering system equates to one hundred thousand and is written as 1,00,000. 50 lakh (50,00,000) is the same as 5 million. | <sup>1</sup> ''Lakh'' in the Indian numbering system equates to one hundred thousand and is written as 1,00,000. 50 lakh (50,00,000) is the same as 5 million. | ||
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[[Category:Railway Administration]] |
Latest revision as of 07:22, 30 July 2020
Beginning in the 1920s and for statistical purposes, the Government of India classified Indian railway systems according to three classes:-
- Class I
- Railways with gross annual earnings of over Rs 50 lakhs (Rs 50,00,000).1
- Class II
- Railways with gross annual earnings of between Rs 10 and 50 lakhs.
- Class III
- Railways with gross annual earnings of under Rs 10 lakhs.
No further reclassification was carried out after 1942 but the rankings remained in use until the mid-1950s.
1 Lakh in the Indian numbering system equates to one hundred thousand and is written as 1,00,000. 50 lakh (50,00,000) is the same as 5 million.