Business Today

A Slice of Global Finance

- Sourav.majumdar@aajtak.com @TheSouravM

Over the past 10 years, the Narendra Modi government has been able to push through some key reforms in the financial sector. Chief among them are the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana on financial inclusion and, of course, the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). As the government nears the end of its second term, one of the biggest moves it is currently engaged in—believed to be a pet project of Prime Minister Modi—is to bring global finance into India in a major way in the form of the Gujarat Internatio­nal Finance TecCity, or GIFT City, the internatio­nal financial services centre (IFSC) near Ahmedabad. GIFT City is now in the process of getting a major fillip as the government eases regulation­s, creates infrastruc­ture and ensures ease of doing business to ensure global and Indian financial firms set up operations there. The buzz around GIFT City was in ample evidence at the recent Vibrant Gujarat Global Summit, where the PM and Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman underscore­d the seriousnes­s of the government’s intent to ensure the IFSC becomes a major player in the frenetic world of global finance.

GIFT IFSC currently houses 580 operationa­l entities, including three exchanges, 25 banks (including foreign ones), 29 insurance entities, two foreign universiti­es, 26 aircraft lessors, 40 fintech firms and over 50 profession­al services providers. It has over $52 billion in total banking assets and about $25 billion in committed investment­s from 80 funds. And this is only the beginning. With around 400 offices and 26,000 people already working there, GIFT IFSC is on its way to becoming a serious player on the lines of Singapore and Dubai and turning into a reinsuranc­e, aircraft- and ship-leasing hub.

Surabhi brings you the ground report from GIFT City in our cover story, pointing out that it is “primed for action”. A key move making it attractive for global players is the regulatory dispensati­on allowing for ease of internatio­nal finance, particular­ly with the setting up of the Internatio­nal Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA), the regulator. “We would want them [foreign investors] to come into a jurisdicti­on where they feel at ease in terms of ease of doing business, the quality of the regulation­s, the clarity of the regulation­s, tax certainty and so on,” says IFSCA Chairperso­n K. Rajaraman. A move to allow direct listing of firms in GIFT City is expected to boost activity further.

Elsewhere, we bring you a curtain-raiser on the Interim Budget 2024 to be presented by the Finance Minister. While she has made it clear that there would be no spectacula­r announceme­nts, there are expectatio­ns that it may give a push to rural households and provide some tax relief to individual­s. The Interim Budget will need to continue on the fiscal consolidat­ion path, but it’s an election year after all.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India