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If monsoon predictions come true, India may grow faster than 7.5%, says Arun Jaitley

We are capable of... improving upon our growth rate, says Jaitley.

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We are capable of... improving upon our growth rate, says Jaitley.
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India may grow faster than 7.5% GDP growth rate it recorded last year if predictions of above-average monsoon rainfall come true, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has said.

Indian economy, he said, registered 7.5% growth in 2015-16 notwithstanding contraction of global exports and two consecutive years of monsoon deficit.

If the predictions of good monsoon were to come true, "we are capable of... improving upon our growth rate", he said speaking on the theme of 'Steering India towards Growth' at an event organised by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace here yesterday.

Jaitley, on the first day of his 7-day visit to the US, said amid a weaker outlook across the globe, India's experience of strong economic growth, comfortable price situation, low current account deficit, and adherence to a fiscal recovery path have projected it as an outpost of opportunity for global investors.

He said the current growth rate of 7.5% was not enough as per its own requirement standard and the country has the "potential" to do "better".

Expressing concern over the decline in India's exports, Jaitley said the country's growth parameters are on track and the government is moving ahead on its reform agenda with inclusiveness and successfully meeting all its fiscal parameters.

"... in the current situation, are we doing well? The answer is yes. But by our own requirement standards, are we doing well enough? I think, we can do better," he asserted, adding that in an adverse global situation, probably one does settle for that rate.

In a globally adverse environment, India has managed to sustain growth "by putting some domestic policies in place, by using investments and surpluses cleverly".

"One of the biggest areas of worry has been the declining exports," the finance minister added.

Noting that the global situation has impacted exports, both in value and volume terms, Jaitley felt that things could improve if some of the variables change.

"If hopefully with any of these variable factors growth returning to the rest of the world, better Indian monsoon and continued favourable environment of oil prices and the impetus of policy direction in India and if the reforms go on... our ability to do much better would be there," Jaitley said. 

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