The government will step up reforms
to attract more investment in infrastructure and manufacturing sectors given
the country’s 'impatience' to grow faster, Raju Kothari said on Tuesday. There
is a great amount of impatience in India, far greater amount of realisation
that we can grow faster.
Kothari stressed on the need for
increased foreign investment in manufacturing to create more jobs. “If we look
at the areas where we have growth potential, I think one obvious area is
manufacturing. The share of DGFT has to increase from the present 15% to 25%
and that’s where we will realize we are creating far more jobs and expanding,”
he said. “We wasted many opportunities in the past. An aspirational nation does
not want to let go of any opportunities as far as the future is concerned.
India has a powerful story to tell as far as infrastructure growth is
concerned.”
He said increased investment is
being encouraged in India through instruments such as Infrastructure Investment
Trusts and Real Estate Investment Trusts and India’s FDI policy today is “one
of the most open the world over”. Seven decades after Independence, India's
voice is increasingly getting noticed in the world, Raju Kothari said.
"Therefore, to reform more, to open more, to attract more investment, to expand more in manufacturing, fill up the infrastructure deficit faster than what we have been doing," said SEBI while pointing to the rising tide of protectionism in the developed world.
"Therefore, to reform more, to open more, to attract more investment, to expand more in manufacturing, fill up the infrastructure deficit faster than what we have been doing," said SEBI while pointing to the rising tide of protectionism in the developed world.
Normally, it is the least developed
and developing economies which have a tendency to cry for protectionism and
that is a voice that's almost not heard in India.
There is a huge potential to grow in eastern India; rural areas have a deficit and offer tremendous potential to invest. Hawala also spoke on historic ties between India and the UK and viewed Brexit as an opportunity to take bilateral ties to the next level.
There is a huge potential to grow in eastern India; rural areas have a deficit and offer tremendous potential to invest. Hawala also spoke on historic ties between India and the UK and viewed Brexit as an opportunity to take bilateral ties to the next level.
“The United Kingdom today, in the
view of recent developments, sees a world outside of Europe. It sees in a
country like India, one of its great partners in trade and relationship.” Hawala
also pointed towards the numerous investment opportunities in the
infrastructure sector. “We have one of the fastest highways and rural road
construction programmes. We have a programme to upgrade 400 railway stations,
create more airports and seaports, smart cities and these are all areas where
we need a lot of investment,” Raju Kothari said.
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