Business Standard

FM CITES IMF REPORT TO HIGHLIGHT GOVT’S PERFORMANC­E

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA New Delhi, 26 August

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Sunday compared two reports by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), one at the fag end of the UPA II regime and the other that the IMF came out with this year, to bring home the point that the NDA government has transforme­d a weakening economy. “We have come a long way. The last four years have seen a series of reforms — legislativ­e and otherwise,” said Jaitley. INDIVJAL DHASMANA writes

Finance minister Arun Jaitley on Sunday compared two reports by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) — one during the fag end of the UPA 2 government and the latest one in 2018 — to drive home his point that the NDA government has transforme­d the ‘weak’ economy handed down by the Manmohan Singh regime.

“We have come a long way. The last four years have seen a series of reforms, both legislativ­e and otherwise, which have been carried out by the government,” said Jaitley on his Facebook page, referring to IMF's latest report.

Urging people to read the reports, he said the system has been substantia­lly cleaned up and made more transparen­t. “Decisivene­ss has led to easier decision making and this made the economy stand out before several countries,” he said.

Quoting the IMF report of 2014, released in February, he said there was high fiscal and current account deficits as well as a standstill in infrastruc­ture, power and in the allocation of natural resources.

In the report, IMF had said economic growth is expected to slow to 4.6 per cent in fiscal year (2013-14), the lowest level in a decade, reflecting global developmen­ts and domestic supply constraint­s. It also said headline CPI inflation is expected to remain near double digits for the remainder of the fiscal year.

The report also said that India has very little room to adopt countercyc­lical policies, constraine­d by persistent­ly-high inflation, and sizeable fiscal and external imbalances.

“Spillovers from renewed external pressures interactin­g with domestic vulnerabil­ities are the principal risks,” it had said. Jaitley said the 2018 IMF report, on the other hand, said economic risks are seeing a downward bias.

The report said external risks include a further increase in internatio­nal oil prices, tighter global financial condition, a retreat from cross-border integratio­n, including spillover risks from a global trade conflict, and rising regional geopolitic­al tensions.

Domestic risks, it said, pertain to tax revenue shortfalls related to continued GST implementa­tion issues and delays in addressing the twin balance sheet problems and other structural reforms.

It also said stability-oriented macroecono­mic policies and progress on structural reforms continue to bear fruit.

Jaitley rolled out statistics from the IMF latest report to say that the economy is being transforme­d. For instance, quoting the report, he said growth is expected to rise to 7.3 per cent in FY'19 and 7.5 per cent in FY'20 on strengthen­ing investment and robust private consumptio­n.

IMF comes out with the country report every year.

“OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS, WE WILL COME OUT WITH A LIST OF EXEMPTIONS, WHICH WE INTEND TO PHASE OUT IN THE FIRST PLACE. IN THE NEXT 4 YEARS, CORPORATIO­N TAX WILL COME DOWN BY 5%” ARUN JAITLEY, Finance Minister

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