The Asian Age

% Govt unapologet­ic about PSU selloff

All non-strategic units to be sold: Sanyal

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New Delhi, June 5: The government is clear and unapologet­ic about privatisat­ion of public sector enterprise­s as part of reforms, principal economic sdvisor Sanjeev Sanyal said on Friday.

Last month, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman had announced that there will be a maximum of four public sector companies in strategic sectors while state-owned firms in other segments will eventually be privatised.

This will be part of a new coherent Public Sector Enterprise­s Policy to be formulated to push reforms in central public sector enterprise­s, she had said while announcing the fifth and last tranche of over Rs 20 lakh crore 'Amtmanirbh­ar Bharat Abhiyan' package.

Talking about the Centre's privatisat­ion drive, Sanyal said, "...we know that privatisat­ion is difficult to do under these circumstan­ces, but we want to be absolutely clear and unapologet­ic about what we want to do. All non-strategic PSUs (public sector undertakin­gs) will be sold when we can do it. It's not lack of intent that will hold us back."

He said the Essential Commoditie­s Act was considered as the "holiest of holy law and it was one of the 10 commandmen­ts" but the government has now changed it.

"Labour laws and others in 10 commandmen­ts, we are going to change it. We are changing it in a very

Sanjeev Sanyal

peculiar way. We are actually going to tighten safety and working condition laws. We are actually introducin­g nationwide minimum wages. So it's not entirely as some people may claim tilted against the labour," he said.

The government is open to various suggestion­s, including from labour unions, to make laws more robust, he said while addressing a virtual AIMA event.

Earlier this week, the Union Cabinet approved an amendment to the six-aand-half decade old Essential Commoditie­s Act to deregulate food items, including cereals, pulses and onion, a move that will transform the farm sector and help raise farmers' income.

Asked about steps to boost demand, Sanyal said the government is cognisant of the situation and as and when need arises, resources will be utilised to support it.

"I can assure you that we watch this very carefully and will be willing to use whatever space we have. As I said, we have some fiscal space, when we have quite a lot of monetary space. And there are other measures as well that can be thought of. We will do it when necessary," he said.

Citing an example, he said, a large pipeline of investment in infrastruc­ture projects is planned for boosting demand and creating employment.

"It is a good opportunit­y. As we lower the cost of capital and with global capital being as cheap as it is, there is a case for putting together a pipeline of large investment projects. So, there are ways of doing this. Demand is not only about reviving consumptio­n. The investment is an important part of building the cycle," he said.

Under the privatisat­ion policy, a list of strategic sectors will be notified where there will be at least one and a maximum of four public sector enterprise­s, apart from private sector companies.

In other sectors, CPSEs will be privatised depending upon the feasibilit­y.

The finance minister had last month said all sectors will be opened to private sectors also. "PSEs will continue to play an important role in defined areas. We need a coherent policy because sometimes you open up some sectors in piecemeal... Now we shall define the areas...where their presence will be impactfull­y felt," Sitharaman had said. —PTI

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