Eastern Eye (UK)

‘State funding to boost growth’

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INDIA plans to sustain its high growth rate through more state capital spending, but will also focus on health and education next year, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman (above) told the Reuters NEXT conference last Wednesday (30).

Sitharaman was speaking amid consultati­ons for the next budget, which is expected to be announced on February 1. It will be the last full budget before national elections in 2024. “We would continue to push capital expenditur­e, and that I’m saying even as I’m preparing for the next budget,” Sitharaman said. “We are well on course on meeting this year’s target. The states have shown extraordin­ary absorption capacity for taking the monies and spending on capital assets.”

The government sees the “capital expenditur­e route as one of those which can guarantee good growth,” she said.

India has budgeted capital spending of `7.5 trillion (£76 billion/ $92.28bn) for the current fiscal year, which ends on March 31.

Sitharaman said she looked forward to “a very good ... growing Indian economy this year and the next”.

The minister added the government was comfortabl­e with the country’s current foreign exchange reserves, but believed the rupee would stabilise without much interventi­on from the central bank.

Inflation, however, was being influenced by external factors for which steps needed to be taken, she said, adding the central bank saw “inflation is in the downward side and it will be well within the tolerance band by early next year or middle of next year”.

The private sector is starting to raise investment­s, she said, which augurs well for the economy that is projected to grow at seven per cent this fiscal year, despite many other economies suffering because of the war.

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