Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
India

PM Modi Urges India Inc To Keep Investment Flow Going

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Sep, 2015 10:31 AM
    Emphasising that one shouldn't seek to profit from another's misfortunes like China's recent economic "pains", Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday urged India Inc to use the current opportunity offered global turmoil as an advantage and keep its investment flow going.
     
    "The prime minister said that somebody's pain shouldn't be our gain. Instead, we should make our own efforts domestically to take up the opportunities from the current global situation," Confederation of Indian Industry president Sumit Mazumdar cited him as saying at meeting here with union ministers, corporate heads and economists to discuss the global markets' turmoil sparked off by the Chinese economic slowdown and attendant opportunities for India. 
     
    "Our economic foundations are strong, that is why we have not been affected by recent Chinese events. However, the prime minister told us that in this situation we should, as industry, also show some risk-taking ability," he told media persons after the meeting.
     
    Among the ministers present were Arun Jaitley (finance), Suresh Prabhu (railways), Nitin Gadkari (road transport and shipping), Nirmala Sitharaman (commerce), Dharmendra Pradhan (petroleum) and Piyush Goyal (coal, power and renewable energy).
     
    Describing India as transiently impacted by recent events in China, Jaitley told reporters after the meeting that the global situation instead presented an opportunity for the country as it is a net importer of commodities and oil is in free fall.
     
    "India is one of the lesser impacted economies (by China devaluation, slowdown), partly because our own fundamentals are reasonably strong," Jaitley said while briefing reporters.
     
    "The main thrust of the meeting was that since India is relatively touched little except for a transient impact on the markets, it should therefore strengthen its domestic economy so that the larger benefits of the global economy may come India's way," he said.
     
    "Being a net importer of commodities globally, the low oil prices are an opportunity for us," the finance minister added.
     
     
    Global crude oil in free fall touched the $40-a-barrel mark in trading late in August, having already dropped under $50 for the second time this year from the level of over $100 last year.
     
    The meeting, that lasted over three hours, discussed the global situation that impacted India economically like a possible hike in the US Federal Reserve rate, the world powers' nuclear deal with Iran contributing partly to cheaper oil and the way the Chinese slowdown opens up opportunities.
     
    A slowdown in the Chinese markets, which led to global markets' crash, coupled with rupee volatility and the risk of a US rate hike, knocked out the Indian equity markets in August.
     
    Reserve Bank Governor Raghuram Rajan, NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Arvind Panagariya, Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian and Aayog member Bibek Debroy also attended the meeting on 'Recent Global Events: Opportunities for India'.
     
    Apart from heads of industry chambers, top industrialists such as Reliance Industries' Mukesh Ambani, Aditya Birla Group head Kumar Mangalam Birla, Adani group chairman Gautam Adani, Tata group chief Cyrus Mistry, Wipro chief Azim Premji, Sun Pharma CMD Dilip Sanghvi, ITC's Y.C. Deveshwar and Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services Ltd chairman Ravi Parthasarathy were among those who attended.
     
    "The general consensus was that growth of emerging economies is all slowing down, except that we (India) are growing at seven percent. So how can we take advantage of this opportunity (of slowdown elsewhere)," said Mazumdar after the meeting.
     
    "The prime minister said this is an opportunity for us to take advantage of and invest. Cost of capital is too high but I don't know how many people can go ahead to take risk and invest... many of us raised the issue of interest rate," said Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and
    Industry (Ficci) president Jyotsna Suri.
     
     
    "The Chinese slowdown means that for India, which has a lot of untapped potential in infrastructure, the costs of creating it are going to come down with lower input costs like steel and cement," said Subramanian.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Two Minors Gang-raped In Bihar

    Two Minors Gang-raped In Bihar
    Two minors, who are cousins, were gang-raped by 15 youth when they were returning from a temple in Bihar's Rohtas district on Wednesday, police said, addding a search was on for the accused.

    Two Minors Gang-raped In Bihar

    'Witty' Parkash Singh Badal Snubs Son's Father-In-Law Satyajit Singh Majithia

    'Witty' Parkash Singh Badal Snubs Son's Father-In-Law Satyajit Singh Majithia
    In a virtual snub to his son's father-in-law, Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on Tuesday noted how much his family has benefited under his dispensation.

    'Witty' Parkash Singh Badal Snubs Son's Father-In-Law Satyajit Singh Majithia

    Syed Ali Geelani Spurns Pakistani Invite As 'Symbolic Protest'

    Syed Ali Geelani Spurns Pakistani Invite As 'Symbolic Protest'
    Hardline senior separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani on Tuesday said he would not attend the 'Eid Milan' function at the Pakistan High Commission on July 21 as a "symbolic protest".

    Syed Ali Geelani Spurns Pakistani Invite As 'Symbolic Protest'

    27 Hindu Pilgrims Die In Andhra Pradesh Stampede

    27 Hindu Pilgrims Die In Andhra Pradesh Stampede
    At least 27 pilgrims were killed and over 60 injured on Tuesday in a horrific stampede here at the start of the Godavari 'Maha Pushkaralu' -- the Kumbh Mela of the south, officials and witnesses said.

    27 Hindu Pilgrims Die In Andhra Pradesh Stampede

    Honest decision, justice for Indian cricket: Lalit Modi

    Honest decision, justice for Indian cricket: Lalit Modi
    Great outcome for justice and integrity. No surprise, first honest decision on Indian cricket and it comes from outside the BCCI. Lodha committee report is just the first step. It is not an end but has to be taken as a starting point. 

    Honest decision, justice for Indian cricket: Lalit Modi

    1984 Riots: When Silence Spoke So Unmistakably

    1984 Riots: When Silence Spoke So Unmistakably
    Sanjay Suri is the author of '1984 - the Anti-Sikh Violence and After'. He was a young crime reporter with The Indian Express newspaper in New Delhi when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her bodyguards on 31 October 1984. 

    1984 Riots: When Silence Spoke So Unmistakably