Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

FM promises support for biz sectors battered by pandemic

Sitharaman says will increase spending to strengthen the health infrastruc­ture

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad

NEW DELHI: Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday pledged to invest more to strengthen India’s health infrastruc­ture and support industries in the Union budget for the year starting April 1.

Addressing business leaders at the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry’s (CII) virtual Partnershi­p Summit, Sitharaman described her third budget in February to be presented in the long shadow of the pandemic as a ‘never before’ event and promised to give abundant attention to all suggestion­s.

Sitharaman’s emphasis on higher healthcare spending and supporting the industries such as hospitalit­y and aviation indicate the general direction of the next budget. “Investment in health is going to be absolutely

not just to make lives safer but also to make health and health-related expenditur­e more predictabl­e for people and not to do it out of pocket,” she said.

She also said that while the rural economy showed resilience during the pandemic, urban India offered a lesson about where it could not take the shock. Cities witnessed a massive reverse migration following the stringent lockdown imposed in March, leading to a humanitari­an crisis.

“Support has to be extended to sectors that got disrupted badly and support to which are now going to be centres of newer demand and newer engines of growth. We need to fuel that engine and run that engine as fast as possible,” the minister said.

The Centre has so far announced three stimulus packages amounting to ₹24.3 lakh crore. While the manufactur­ing sector has recovered in the September quarter from the 39.3% contractio­n seen in the June quarter, trade, hotels, transport, communicat­ion and services related to broadcasti­ng are still in the negative territory as per the Q2 GDP data released last month. India’s economy slowed its pace of contractio­n to 7.5% in Q2. For the Centre , a major challenge is to create an adequate number of jobs amid work increasing­ly becoming technology-driven and automated.

Sitharaman said the way in which jobs are created will go through a massive change, with ‘working from home’ becoming a culture. Continued and justifiabl­e anxiety that women’s participat­ion in the workforce is not adequate needed to be looked at, she said. “We will be a country where 60% of population is going to be under 30 years of age, which is a blessing, and we have to provide them with the right kind of skills. Vocational training has to be given with a new perspectiv­e,” she said.

Economic affairs secretary Tarun Bajaj on Friday said he is hopeful of the Indian economy getting back on track soon given the signs of sustained improvemen­t, and that in the next fiscal year, the size of the economy may cross the FY20 level by a slight margin.

Bajaj said that he expects an improvemen­t in economic activity and hopes the Indian economy to post a small, positive growth in December. “From May when covid had hit us to December seems like a long journey. In May, we didn’t know where we were heading. The revenues were absolutely down. We didn’t know how the virus will hit the country with a population of 1.3 billion people. For the third and fourth quarters, I would not like to quote anybody else but my own central bank. They have recently come out with the projection of slight positive growth both in the third and fourth quarters,” he said.

 ?? ANI ?? Finance minister N Sitharaman said support must be extended to sectors which are now going to be centres of newer demand.
ANI Finance minister N Sitharaman said support must be extended to sectors which are now going to be centres of newer demand.

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