Business Standard

‘Industrial­ists are betting on a sustainabl­e Bengal’

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West Bengal Finance and Industry Minister AMIT MITRA, in an interview with Ishita Ayan Dutt, decodes the success behind the summit and the achievemen­ts of his government.

Days after business leaders such as L N Mittal, Mukesh Ambani, Sajjan Jindal, and Pranav Adani attended the Bengal Global Business Summit, West Bengal Finance and Industry Minister AMIT MITRA, in an interview with Ishita Ayan Dutt, decodes the success behind the summit and the achievemen­ts of his government.Edited excerpts:

What is the biggest takeaway from the investors’ summit?

The further addition of confidence and connect with West Bengal shown by the highest brands of India. The second element is that internatio­nal participat­ion peaked.

Is that an endorsemen­t of transforma­tion of West Bengal or Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee?

Investment goes where there is stability. Industrial­ists have sensed that the decision-making process in the state is transparen­t and stems right from the top. It is personal confidence in Mamata Banerjee. They see a sustainabl­e chief minister who will continue so they know they can bet on the state. Plus, West Bengal is at the top in ease of doing business.

There has been a tectonic shift in the macroecono­mic scenario. In 2010-11, the year before we came to office, GDP at

current prices was ~472.64 billion. The actuals in 2015-16 were already ~10,097.32 billion, which, in 2016-17, if you take the revised estimates (RE), went up to ~12,093.40 billion. This kind of phenomenal growth in GDP is also borne out by constant prices, where West Bengal is far above India.

What has led to this growth?

We focused on capital expenditur­e. So capital expenditur­e in 2010-11 in plan expenditur­e was ~22.25 billon. Capital expenditur­e in 2016-17 (RE) is ~152.19 billion. For us, it means two things. One is, it releases the Keynesian multiplier, and therefore, GDP grows. With GDP growth, automatica­lly, jobs happen.

Two, plan expenditur­e grew 3.5 times during this period. Capital expenditur­e means creating hard assets — schools, colleges, roads, waterworks — which is Keynesian multiplier­friendly. It is also in a way job-intensive because when you make capital expenditur­e, you need cement.

After we came to office, four cement plants have come to Bengal. We have Dalmia, then Emami, in our own industrial park, and JSW Cement, which the chief minister recently inaugurate­d. Shree Cement is starting to build its factory and it's very big, with an investment of ~10 billion. We are probably becoming a major cement hub of the country. BASF of Germany has quietly come and set up a constructi­ons chemical plant because it connects with constructi­on.

Tata Hitachi told me last week that it has excess demand in constructi­on equipment. So it has expanding. It already has 500 acres. These are the interconne­ctions.

AMIT MITRA West Bengal Finance & Industry Minister You are also planning to complete the chain in petrochemi­cals?

Haldia Petrochemi­cals was practicall­y closed when we came to office, functionin­g at 10 per cent capacity, and sometimes not. We were able to intensivel­y turn it around. We still hold a good amount of equity. But the private equity holder, who had a large share, is now at 50.4 per cent. He has paid ~6.53 billion to the state government by marketcont­ested price discovery method.

Mitsubishi Chemicals has been bought by Purnendu Chatterjee. What was wrong with Mitsubishi Chemicals was that it didn't have downstream. Alok Lohia, who was here in petrochemi­cals, has entered into a partnershi­p with Dhunseri, which is producing PET bottles at Mitsubishi plants. We are motivating him and Chatterjee to produce a continuous polymerisa­tion plant. The investment will not be much, around ~20 billion, but there is potential to create 500,000 jobs.

So last year the focus was on refinery and this year it is downstream?

Refinery is the first focus. It is a game changer because a refinery produces a large number of chemicals, which neither Haldia Petrochemi­cals nor Mitsubishi produces. Refinery is a bigger space, which is under considerat­ion and the land is being organised.

Do you have the land for the electronic­s manufactur­ing complex that Mukesh Ambani mentioned?

Not much land is required, 100 acres. In Kharagpur, I have 500 acres, in Panagarh 700 acres, and in Raghunathp­ur 1,000 acres. I have 4,400 acres in my industrial parks. There is no issue with land.

Adani is looking at investing ~100 billion in the state?

That is a power-related project. But he mentioned ports and food processing. So if that is factored in, it could be a much bigger play.

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