Indian Economy to be Third
Largest by 2043
UPA
Outlines Ten Steps for A Vibrant Economy
While
presenting the Interim Budget 2014-15, the Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram
said that in the next three decades India will become the third largest economy
behind USA and China. In future, the fortunes of China and India will have a
significant impact on the rest of the world. Therefore, the Indian Government
must be responsible not only to itself but to the whole world by keeping the
country’s economy in robust health.
The
Finance Minister said that the UPA Government has a clear vision of the goals
that have been set for itself. The Minister went on to
elaborate the ten tasks that his Government intends to take to achieve those
goals.
i. Fiscal
Consolidation: A target of fiscal deficit of 3 percent
of GDP must be achieved by 2016-17 and must always be kept below that level.
ii. Current
Account Deficit: Since the economy will run a Current Account Deficit every
year for some more years, it can be financed only by foreign investment, whether
it is FDI or FII or ECB or any other kind of foreign inflow. Therefore, foreign
investment must be encouraged.
iii. Price Stability and Growth: In a developing economy where the aim
is high growth, a moderate level of inflation will have to be accepted. RBI
must strike a balance between price stability and growth while formulating
monetary policy.
iv. Financial
Sector Reforms: The recommendations of the Financial Sector Legislative
Reforms Commission must be implemented immediately as they do not require any
change in legislation. Also, a timetable must be drawn for other recommendations
that require legislation.
v. Infrastructure:
The country must rebuild its infrastructure and add a huge quantity of new
infrastructure. Every proven model must be adopted but the PPP model must in
India rather than import them into India.
vii. Subsidies:
Given the limited resources, and the many claims on the resources, the Government
must choose the subsidies that are absolutely necessary and give them only to the
absolutely deserving.
viii. Urbanisation:
The country’s cities will become ungovernable, and perhaps unliveable, if
attention is not paid to the decay in these cities. Cities have wealth and also
create wealth. But that wealth should be tapped for resources to rebuild the
cities with a new model of governance.
ix. Skill
Development: Skill development must rank alongside secondary education,
university education, total sanitation and universal health care in the
priorities of the Government.
x. Sharing
responsibility between States and Centre: States have the fiscal space
to bear a reasonable proportion of the financial costs of implementing flagship
programmes and must willingly do so, so that the Central Government can
allocate more resources for subjects such as defence, railways national
highways and telecommunications that are its exclusive responsibility.