facebook-page-view
Advertisement

Govt keen to pursue reforms: Jaitley

By PTI

  • 18 Sep 2015
Govt keen to pursue reforms: Jaitley
Other | Credit: Reuters

Promising to make India an attractive investment destination and a better place to do business, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today said changes to arbitration laws and several other legislations are in the pipeline while the bankruptcy code is ready to push ahead the reforms process.

Inviting global investors, he said India is no more a nation suffering from policy paralysis and uncertain tax regime and assured them of continuing the reforms for development of the investment-friendly environment.

"The bankruptcy code is ready and changes to arbitration laws and several other legislations are in the pipeline... For the next few years, we have our agenda full, reforms are an ongoing process," Jaitley said.

Advertisement

The Finance Minister was speaking at a 'dialogue session' with nearly 300 Singapore-based business leaders and investors including representatives of global entities from Europe and America on the first leg of his four-day visit to Singapore and Hong Kong.

In an apparent reference to the lack of numbers in Rajya Sabha where the government is not able to push major bills, he said the legislations which could be taken in the form of Money Bill would be pursued.

He regretted however that the key indirect taxation reform Bill - Goods and Services Tax (GST) - could not be pushed through in the last session of Parliament.

Advertisement

"Investors world over have been quite appreciative of what is happening in India, so they have great hopes of India being an important player in the world economy today," Jaitley told reporters after the 'dialogue session'.

"This is particularly because, notwithstanding the slowdown world over, Indian economy is able to maintain a fairly rapid pace. Therefore, the idea is that the economy should continue to grow, and for growth you need investment," he added.

Jaitley said a lot of public investment is taking place in India and the government is trying to ensure that private investment, including from abroad, also goes up to support economic growth.

Advertisement

He said that investors from the world over have been quite appreciative of what is happening in India and "they have great hopes of India being an important player in the world economy today". 

The government, Jaitley said, has been trying to address the problems of some of the sectors which are going through a bad phase.

"There have been some stressed sectors. Steel, power and discoms and sectoral interest of these sectors over the last few months have been specifically addressed," he said.

Advertisement

Referring to the banking sector reforms, he said the government is recapitalising state-owned banks and professionalising their management.

"Banking sector is another stressed sector in India and we have started recapitalising and professionalising the banking system. The programme we have laid down...over the next 3-4 years, our banks will be back in shape. It is not a very challenging situation they were passing through... They will get out of that phase," he said.

A host of initiatives by the government, Jaitley said, have brought about "a positive environment which has built up across the country. Now every state is vying for global investment".

Advertisement

He regretted however that the key indirect taxation reform Bill - Goods and Services Tax (GST) - could not be pushed through in the last session of Parliament.

On the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) scheme, the minister said it has helped in reducing subsidies and rationalising public expenditure.

"Our direct benefit transfer...has actually rationalised a lot of expenditure which was otherwise going waste.

Duplications have been done away with, and even in the case of food and fertiliser, the pilot projects are now taking off.

Once these projects go through, our saving itself, without an impact on the underprivileged, is going to be reasonable," he added.

The savings on these accounts, Jaitley said, would be diverted to improve irrigation facilities and infrastructure.

"The economic returns of investment on irrigation are always the fastest. You build up a huge agriculture buffer and control food prices and you build up a large purchasing power among a majority of Indians. This impacts the manufacturing and services sector," he said.

The government has been focusing on development of highways, which had slowed "terribly", he added.

"Infrastructure had slowed over the years. Rural roads to the national highway programme have picked up in a big way.

Highways had slowed down terribly, but it's one of the sectors (in which) in the last 12 months, a lot of public resources have been invested. We put in a lot of budgetary support in modernising the railways," the Minister added.

"Investors world over have been quite appreciative of what is happening in India, so they have great hopes of India being an important player in the world economy today," Jaitley told reporters after the 'dialogue session'.

"This is particularly because, notwithstanding the slowdown world over, Indian economy is able to maintain a fairly rapid pace. Therefore, the idea is that the economy should continue to grow, and for growth you need investment," he added.

"At the moment there is a lot of public investment taking place in India," he said, while adding that the country is also expecting increase in the foreign direct investment.

"And also as pressures on private sector come down, we are trying to ensure that the private sector investment also increases. Now with the increased investment you need to increase the economic activity which leads to further growth of the economy that the is objective and that is the interaction we have with the investors," he added.

Jaitley also held a meeting with Singapore's Foreign Minister K Shanmugam and is scheduled to call on Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong later this evening.

He is also scheduled to meet Singapore state investor, Temasek Holdings and another group of investors led by Goldman Sachs.

Share article on

Advertisement
Advertisement