Speaking to the India Today, Singh said the Modi government should use India’s improving fiscal balances to raise investment in the economy and raise credit availability to businesses.
“In the hands of a purposeful government, this could be an opportunity to step up investment in the economy in a big way,” said Singh, who left office after a 2014 election loss.
#ManmohanSingh who is regarded as the architect of India’s economic reforms that led to years of rapid growth, said the government has not been able to capitalise on falling oil and commodity prices that have lowered India’s import bill.
India’s turbocharged growth figures have been criticised by many analysts for giving too flattering a view of Asia’s third-largest economy.
Indian economy posted growth of 7.3 percent in the quarter through December, but consumer inflation inched up unexpectedly last month and capital goods production, a proxy for investments, fell nearly 20 percent in December.
Modi’s finance minister Arun Jaitley is expected to present a credible budget on February 29, people involved in the process say, yet the government might break its budget deficit targets to stimulate demand.
#ManmohanSingh said Narendra Modi should focus on improving relations with neighbouring countries, adding that the government has not succeeded at making headway with arch-rival Pakistan who India accuses of supporting insurgents across their shared border.
“It has been one step forward, two steps back.”
India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence and partition in 1947, two over Kashmir. Their disputed frontier is one of the world’s most heavily militarised regions. Border clashes and incursions pose a constant risk of escalation
, #ManmohanSingh an Oxbridge-educated economist as finance minister in 1991 was credited for reforms that opened up the Indian economy, but his legacy is marred by his final term as PM marked by corruption scandals, ballooning inflation and skidding economic growth.
Leave a Reply