India to return to 8 pc growth rate in 2 yrs: FM

New York: Asserting that India can absorb USD 50 billion foreign investment annually, Finance Minister P Chidambaram has said the downturn in Indian economy was temporary and growth will return to 8 per cent in two years. Acknowledging the largeness of the current account deficit (CAD) at around 5 per cent of GDP in 2012-13, […]

New York: Asserting that India can absorb USD 50 billion foreign investment annually, Finance Minister P Chidambaram has said the downturn in Indian economy was temporary and growth will return to 8 per cent in two years.

 
On the decline in investments in India in the last few years, Chidambaram said they were because of their own issues and domestic problems.

"They (investors) have become more cautious and need money for their own resources. Their economies require more funds and added to the downturn in India, naturally," he said.

On ratings given by agencies, he said India has made out a case for ratings upgrade. "Some (agencies) upgraded from negative to stable and there will be an upgrade for sure. In course of time there will be an upgrade," he said.

"We were never in any danger (of a rating downgrade) and we feel the negative outlook is perhaps not justified at all.

I believe that they downgraded China from AA plus to A plus.

If they are looking at candidates for downgrading, I can suggest a few," he said.

Answering questions on the concern expressed in some sections on growing corruption cases and infrastructure lacuna in India, Chidambaram said "of course there is corruption.

"Corruption was raised as one of the issues in meetings with investors but they did not dominate the discussions. In the last two days if two questions were asked on corruption, 20 were on infrastructure development," he said.

Finance Minister said India needed USD 1 trillion in infrastructure projects alone in the next five years, of which 47 per cent will come from private sector and remaining from government and public sector enterprises.

Stating that there was a need to review FDI sectoral caps, Chidambaram said, "There were many caps imposed at different points in time. We have set up a committee to go into the nature of each cap and ask a question: Has the cap served a purpose? Does it continue to serve a purpose? If it does, let the cap continue. If it does not, then the cap should either be relaxed or removed."