The Asian Age

FM has pressed several right buttons

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The Finance Minister has covered almost all sectors in Friday's Budget, from agricultur­e to infrastruc­ture to financial sector and many others. She has pressed a number of right buttons — be it in terms of talking about a new education policy to revamp the education and skilling ecosystem, or steps towards mitigating the woes of the financial sector, or the plans to step up infrastruc­ture creation. Once the details of implementa­tion get unfolded over a period of time, further clarity will emerge.

As the present government is in continuity, the Budget aims to build on various policy reforms already undertaken by this government over the last five years. The target investment figure of Rs 100 trillion for infrastruc­ture over a five-year horizon will surely be encouragin­g for the country. This only reemphasiz­es this government's continued infrastruc­ture focus. The announceme­nts towards creation of national grids for power, water, gas, internet set the tone for the building of a vibrant, new India and such steps will definitely improve the standard of living for the masses in a significan­t way.

Adequate emphasis has been laid on the improvemen­t of connectivi­ty through enlarging the network of roads and waterways, creation of more regional airports and undertakin­g a massive railway expansion plan. Equally important is the announceme­nt of building domestic capability and capacity in maintenanc­erepair-overhaul (MRO) in the aviation sector. The kind of sops that have been announced for affordable housing (with valuation up to Rs 45 lakh) will provide a big boost to the housing sector. Not only will all these create huge number of jobs, both skilled and unskilled, but also create demand for other ancillary industries downstream. This large envisaged investment in infrastruc­ture sector has not specifical­ly mentioned the role of the private sector, which we presume will be announced in due course.

The announceme­nt that the government is exploring external markets for borrowing, coupled with a number of initiative­s aimed at easing the inflow of foreign capital in Indian entities seem to be a conscious effort to tap the abundant low-cost global capital which is on the lookout for good investment options. This is again another well -intentione­d move, given the current difficulti­es in accessing credit domestical­ly.

Given the importance of the NBFC sector in the economy and the kind of liquidity problems they are facing, we are happy that the FM has announced several measures for this sector. In particular, we are enthused about the announceme­nt of a one-time six-month partial guarantee of Rs 1 lakh crore extended to state-run banks for purchasing consolidat­ed pooled assets of financiall­ysound NBFCs. This is indeed a timely move.

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