India has its hands full in implementing key reforms: Jaitley

World Tuesday 19/April/2016 16:04 PM
By: Times News Service
India has its hands full in implementing key reforms: Jaitley

New York: India has its "hands full" in bringing about structural changes and implementing key reforms to boost economic growth, Finance Minister of India Arun Jaitley has said and hoped that the country will be able to improve its growth this year from the 7.6 per cent achieved last fiscal.
Outlining the direction forward for the Indian economy in his address at the Asia Society here on Tuesday, Jaitley said the country still requires a lot of structural changes and the government has taken steps to ease processes, make the business environment easier and bring in greater transparency into the system.
Jaitley expressed hope that the bankruptcy law would be approved over the next few weeks and said the government "is in the final stages" of passing a law that deals with commercial indebtedness.
The government has also changed arbitration laws, amended some of the "onerous provisions" of the Companies Act and will bring down corporate tax to 25 per cent over the next couple of years.
On indirect taxes, he said India is in the "last stages" before the Goods and Services Tax (GST) is approved by the Parliament and then with supporting legislations, it actually gets into implementation.
"I think we have all our hands full, the next couple of years bringing about each one of these structural changes. In addition to this, two significant directions which I have followed are increased expenditure in infrastructure and in rural India.
"These are the two areas which were lacking and these appear to be the focus area. That probably will be the direction of the economy in the next few years," Jaitley said.
He said the world at the moment still faces serious challenges and India cannot "immune" itself from most of the challenges.
He however expressed hope that the country will be able to register improved economic growth this year as compared to the previous fiscals.
"Notwithstanding that we have consistently even in the slowdown environment grown by about 7 per cent, 7.2 per last year, 7.6 this fiscal which ended a few days ago and hopefully this year we could improve on that data," he said in his address on 'Make in India- the New Deal' hosted by CII and the Asia Society Policy Institute.
Jaitley underscored that while India has done fairly well in an environment of global economic challenges, it has the potential to grow even faster.
"I have always believed that given by global standards in a slowdown environment, India is doing significantly well. But given by our own standards and our expectations of being able to grow faster, eradicate poverty and transform into a developed country, we probably can do a little better," he said, adding that steps that are being taken in this regard to help India register faster economic growth.
"Trade is one area where every country watches its interests and that's a freedom we allow to each other," he said.
When asked about India's interest in joining trade pacts like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in order to be competitive, Jaitley said every economy on the international forum will be "concerned" about its own interests but there has been a lot of change in attitude in India towards trade.
He said India has moved on from being uncertain about trade with other nations to a more confident economy on the world stage now.
"With a much larger economy, I think Indian confidence in terms of dealing with other countries in terms of trade has also significantly increased.
The India of 2016 is going to be significantly different from the India of the early 1990s," he said.
Recalling the early years of the 1990s, Jaitley said there was a large body of opinion in India during that time including in the government "where we feared the unknown as to what would happen.
"We weren't strong enough to trade freely. Over the last two decades a lot of water has flown. We have become a large economy, we positively interact with bodies of other nations," he said.