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Budget Will Be Responsible: Chidambaram
H S Rao/London | Jan 29, 2013
Finance Minister P Chidambaram today held out an assurance
that the Budget next month will be a "responsible" one as general
elections are 15 months away.
Addressing global investors
here, on the fourth leg of his overseas roadshows that began last week,
he told them that the government will implement many of the decisions
and changes in the run-up to the polls.
He expressed confidence
that foreign investment flows into India will improve after these
roadshows which have shown that India has enormous goodwill.
The
Minister expressed confidence that government would find a resolution to
the Vodafone tax controversy, an issue that figured only peripherally
in the investor meeting here.
Chidambaram said during the
meeting here investors expressed reservations over political stability
and capacity of the government to take reforms forward. They pointed out
that elections are due in 2014 and "will we waver or falter in the
run-up to the elections".
"I assured them that the polls are
15 months away and that the Budget that will be presented in February
will be a responsible Budget, that we will implement many of the
decisions and changes in the run-up to the polls," he told reporters
after the meeting.
Chidambaram said there is no reason for
investors to doubt that "in the run-up to the polls we will be anything
but responsible".
The Finance Minister said after the
roadshows in the four cities "there is enormous interest in India. There
is enormous goodwill for India, that India must get back to the high
growth path and they want us to recapture what we achieved between 2004
and 2009. I am very positive and I am very hopeful".
Maintaining that foreign direct investment (FDI) are robust, he said figures till October show that it continue to be good.
"But
I think after these road shows in Hong Kong, Singapore, Frankfurt and
now in London, I think FDI interest will improve and FDI flows will
improve," he said.
Chidambaram said if one went by the number of
people attending the conferences and questions they asked, it showed
there was enormous interest and goodwill for India.
"I sincerely
hope that these roadshows have helped to answer their questions,
clarified their doubts and stimulate interest in India," he said.
"They
were more concerned about fiscal consolidation, policy to address
structural issues and stalled projects and how we are going to remove
these roadblocks and get them started," he said.
Chidambaram said
while the bulk of the questions was in these areas, on financial
sectors it was mainly about taxation on investment, know-your-customer
(KYC) norms and related issues.
Among those who attended the conference were NRI industrialists G P Hinduja and S P Hinduja and Caparo CEO Angad Paul.
Later, a note issued by Standard Chartered, a co-host of the Finance Minister's investor meet in London, said Chidambaram emphasised that fiscal consolidation will happen at any cost.
The note said Chidambaram promised action on both revenue and expenditure side.
"On the expenditure side, while subsidies cannot be removed completely, he emphasised they could be better administered by rolling out the direct benefit transfer scheme to the entire country by end-2013," the note said.
On RBI reducing the key rates by 0.25 per cent in its policy review today, the note said the Finance Minister was pleased with the reduction in repo rate.
"Striking the right balance between growth and inflation remains a policy challenge. While high inflation hurts the poor, low growth is equally harmful", Chidambaram said.
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