Business Standard

President sets the tone for a swadeshi Budget

Protests in Parliament against CAA, NRC mar his address

- ARCHIS MOHAN

Hearkening back to the post-independen­ce decades, when the slogan was “be Indian, buy Indian”, President Ram Nath Kovind on Friday appealed to the people to “transform the philosophy of ‘buy local for a better tomorrow’ into a movement”.

In his address to the joint sitting of the two Houses of Parliament, a customary address that details the government’s programmes and policies at the start of the first session of a new year, the President “urged every Indian to give priority to local products”.

The Budget session of Parliament started on Friday.

“By using locally manufactur­ed products, you will be able to help the small entreprene­urs in your area to a great extent,” Kovind said, adding that the fundamenta­l mantra of independen­ce was a self-reliant India.

In his independen­ce day speech from Red Fort last year, his first in his second term, Prime Minister Narendra Modi too had exhorted people to buy locally — at the village, dis

trict and state levels — to help local cottage industries and small entreprene­urs.

The President’s appeal comes as India has reported the worst unemployme­nt rates in 45 years, with consumptio­n at a low and dwindling tax collection.

Not only had India refused to sign the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) with the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in November over fears that such a pact would harm domestic industry, there are demands to review its existing free-trade agreements as well with Asean member states.

Kovind said the government was committed to attaining the goal of making India a $5-trillion economy. He did not give any timeline, which until now has been 2024, but the Economic Survey for 2019-20, tabled in the Lok Sabha, said it was 2025.

Protests against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act and National Register of Citizens marred the President’s speech. MPS of the Congress and some other opposition parties wore black-arm bands as a mark of protest. At least three Trinamool Congress MPS wore white shirts with the slogan “No CAA, No NRC, No NPR” painted in red, and the rest stood up to raise similar banners when the President spoke about the CAA.

After the President referred to the CAA in his speech, ruling National Democratic Alliance MPS applauded for half a minute, followed by cries of “shame shame” from some opposition MPS.

Congress President Sonia Gandhi and the leader of the opposition i n the Rajya Sabha, Ghulam Nabi Azad, refused their designated front-row seats and joined party MPS in the fifth row of the Central Hall.

 ??  ?? President Ram Nath Kovind at the joint session of Parliament as the Budget session begins
President Ram Nath Kovind at the joint session of Parliament as the Budget session begins

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