The Asian Age

‘Dream Budget’ to INX nightmare

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New Delhi, Aug. 22: He once presented a ‘Dream Budget’ and helmed the crucial finance as well as home ministries but today 73year-old lawyer-politician Palaniappa­n Chidambara­m is facing the toughest crisis of his career.

Arrested by the CBI over charges of money laundering and corruption in the INX Media case, Mr Chidambara­m might be in for a long battle in courts before the case comes to a closure.

A votary of free enterprise and unbridled economic reforms, Mr Chidambara­m started off as a hard-core leftist arguing in favour of the command economy in the late 1960s.

A scion of a prominent industrial­ist family from Tamil Nadu, Mr Chidambara­m — who has done MBA from Harvard Business School — chose not to join the family business. Instead, he ventured into politics by joining the Congress after the party lost power in Tamil Nadu in 1967.

He remained with Indira Gandhi when the party split in 1969 and in 1984, was inducted as a junior commerce minister in Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi-led government.

Mr Chidambara­m was also a junior minister in Prime Minister Narasimha Rao-led government, holding portfolios such as commerce and industry.

However, disagreeme­nt with the party’s decision over political alignments saw him quitting and setting up a new political outfit in 1996.

A year later, as finance minister in the United Front government, he presented the ‘Dream Budget’ that helped broaden India’s tax base. The Budget came at a time when economic reforms were seen as antipoor in the coalition area.

Mr Chidambara­m returned to Congress and became finance minister under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He was at the helm of finance ministry between 2004 and 2008, before becoming home minister from December 2008 to July 2012. He returned to the finance ministry for the rest of the UPA-II term that ended in 2014.

He is widely credited with implementi­ng a series of reforms to stem a slowdown in growth, curb a widening fiscal deficit and attract more foreign investment into Asia’s third largest economy.

As BJP came to power, probe agencies started casting their net on him and his family in connection with corruption cases, including INX Media, Aircel Maxis and more recently purchase of aircraft by Air India during his tenure as finance minister in UPA-II.

Mr Chidambara­m entered Parliament from Sivaganga constituen­cy in Tamil Nadu in 1984. And served as junior commerce minister in the Rajiv Gandhi government.

The big-break in his political career came when he quit Congress and joined Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC), which was part of the coalition government under Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda.

While the BJP-led NDA was in power (1999-2004), Chidambara­m quit TMC in 2001 and formed his own party Congress Jananayaka Peravai. However, things did not go as planned and he had to merge his party with the Congress.

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