financetom
Economy
financetom
/
Economy
/
Narendra Modi Government 2.0: India to see 'big-bang' reforms, says NITI Aayog official
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Narendra Modi Government 2.0: India to see 'big-bang' reforms, says NITI Aayog official
May 31, 2019 2:55 AM

In the first 100 days of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's second term, a slew of 'big-bang' economic reforms that should please foreign investors are likely to be pursued, according to a top official at the government's main think tank.

Share Market Live

NSE

The reforms will include changes in labour laws, privatisation moves, and creation of land banks for new industrial development, said Rajiv Kumar, vice chairman of NITI Aayog (National Institute for Transforming India), who reports directly to Modi.

"They (foreign investors) will have reasons to be happy. You will see a slew of reforms I can assure you of that. We are going to pretty much hit the ground running," Kumar told Reuters in an interview. Modi is chairman of the think tank.

Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were last weeks declared landslide winners of India's general election with an increased majority in the Lok Sabha.

He was sworn into office for his second term on Thursday night.

Kumar was speaking before Modi on Thursday announced members of his new cabinet, though he hasn't said who will get which portfolio. Several Indian media outlets say that BJP President Amit Shah will become the country's new finance minister.

Niti Aayog, which now acts as the main centre for policy making and for driving new ideas, was founded four years back when Modi scrapped the 65-year old planning commission, saying that India was stifled with Soviet-style bureaucracy.

Kumar said reforms in India's complicated labour laws will see the light of day as early as the next parliamentary session in July when the government will place a new bill before the lower house for approval.

It will aim to combine 44 central laws into four codes – wages, industrial relations, social security and welfare, and the fourth - occupational safety, health and working conditions.

This should help companies avoid getting embroiled in a series of complicated disputes with their workers and officials that involve regulations set by authorities at different levels of government and can lead to long, drawn-out adjudication in various parts of the legal system.

The government could also offer swathes of land to foreign investors from the land banks it plans to create from unutilised land controlled by public sector enterprises, Kumar said.

"What could be attempted is to build an inventory of government land that can then be offered to foreign investors," Kumar said.

The land parcels could be designed as clusters catering to a specific set of investors or industrial sectors, Kumar said.

Getting access to some of the large amounts of unutilised Indian government land would reduce major risks for foreign companies as there would be a lot less risk of legal challenges over ownership and development. A lot of the sites they have used in the past was previously farmland, opening them up to protests and court action by local communities over land rights, the environment and other issues.

Kumar said the government will focus on fully privatising or closing more than 42 state-controlled companies in the coming months. The government is even mulling lifting the foreign direct investment cap on Air India, the loss-making state-owned flagship carrier, to make it easier to sell.

Kumar also said that it could create an autonomous holding company that would control all state-owned firms and wouldn't be answerable to lots of different ministries. This would speed up decision making for asset sales, avoiding much of the central government's bureaucracy.

Big Bang

India’s economic growth rate decelerated to a five-quarter low of 6.6 percent in the last three months of 2018 and is expected to fall further in the January-March quarter due to a sharp drop in consumption.

The economy needs far faster growth if it is to generate enough jobs for the millions of young people entering the labour market each month.

Kumar blamed the stressed balance sheet of banks and a crisis in the shadow lending industry for the recent drop in growth.

He suggested the government should start with reforming the state-owned banking sector and also create more money for spending on infrastructure and new public housing through more and quicker privatisations and better tax collection.

"We should (start with the banks)... There will be a big bang, there will be 100 days action. We are all geared for that ... I have maintained that the fiscal policy should be countercyclical. There is scope for that."

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
US weekly jobless claims edge lower
US weekly jobless claims edge lower
Mar 27, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits slipped last week, while the jobless rate appeared to have held steady in March. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 224,000 for the week ended March 22, the Labor Department said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 225,000 claims...
Dogecoin Gains, XRP Slumps as Trump Warns of 'Far Larger' Tariffs
Dogecoin Gains, XRP Slumps as Trump Warns of 'Far Larger' Tariffs
Mar 27, 2025
Risk assets such as bitcoin (BTC), xrp (XRP), solana (SOL) are back in focus as President Donald Trump warned of even more reciprocal tariffs if other countries collude to do economic harm to the U.S. If the European Union works with Canada in order to do economic harm to the USA, he wrote in a Truth Social post in early...
Taiwan plans response to Trump tariffs with energy imports, tariff cuts
Taiwan plans response to Trump tariffs with energy imports, tariff cuts
Mar 26, 2025
TAIPEI, March 27 (Reuters) - Taiwan is considering a variety of responses to potential new tariffs from the United States including increasing energy imports and reducing the island's own tariffs to balance bilateral trade, government officials said on Thursday. Trump administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, have said that much of the reciprocal U.S. tariff focus will be on...
US GDP Growth Upwardly Revised In Q4, Trade Deficit Slightly Narrows As Auto Exports Soar In February
US GDP Growth Upwardly Revised In Q4, Trade Deficit Slightly Narrows As Auto Exports Soar In February
Mar 27, 2025
Economic data released Thursday morning showed a marginal upward revision to U.S. gross domestic product growth for the fourth quarter of 2024, alongside a narrower but still historically high goods trade deficit for February. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that the U.S. economy expanded at an annualized rate of 2.4% in the fourth quarter of 2024, up from the...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved