Govt could have done much more in past 4 years: EAC-PM member

On the economic front, Modi's election, I think, was a mandate for development and economic reforms, she said.

Update: 2018-09-03 07:28 GMT
Shamika Ravi, a senior fellow at Brookings India, would be appointed as part-time member of the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM). (Photo: Twitter| Shamika Ravi)

New Delhi: The government has taken a host of reforms, but much more could have been done over the past four years, said Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM) member Shamika Ravi.

The Modi government has introduced Goods and Services Tax (GST), Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) and considerably eased the foreign direct investment regime in four years, Ravi said.

However, she noted that "the government could have done much more".

"...I think the country had an appetite for big bang economic reforms. We could have done a lot," Ravi told PTI in an interview.

"On the economic front, Modi's election, I think, was a mandate for development and economic reforms," she said.

She further pointed out that the government could have done much more on liberalisation.

"Starting with the ITDC Hotels, Air India, in fact we had list of PSUs that we should have definitely pushed ahead (for stake sale)," Ravi, also a senior fellow at Brookings India, said.

Stating that there is a thriving private airlines business in the country, she questioned the government's intention of reviving national carrier Air India.

"I have lesser faith in government to run businesses... What is the business plan for turnaround of Air India and why should we do it? We have a thriving private airlines business in this country," she noted.

Replying to a question on the ongoing global tariff wars, Ravi said that it's a great opportunity for India.

"We should be stepping up and trying to fill the gap," she observed.

On March 9, US President Donald Trump imposed heavy tariffs on imported steel and aluminum items following which China and EU hit back by imposing retaliatory tariffs against the American products.

Noting that India has to compete in the global market, Ravi said that the country will have make its corporate tax rate equivalent to countries like Vietnam.

"Despite the fact that there is push back in globalisation everywhere, markets today are far more unified and interlinked than they have ever been... To compete with countries like Vietnam, of course our taxes have to be reduced," the EAC-PM member insisted.

She emphasised that India will have make its manufacturing sector attractive to compete in global markets.

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