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India's fiscal stance sensible, appropriate: IMF chief Christine Lagarde

India has similar potential like that of the US and China to be able to sustain high growth rates for a long period of time, Jayant Sinha said.

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"We also highly value the investments being made into major infrastructure projects because we believe it is the right way to stimulate short-term growth," Lagarde said.
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Terming the India's fiscal stance as 'appropriate and sensible', the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said that investments in major infrastructure projects are right way to stimulate the economy.

"We consider that the fiscal stance adopted by India is exactly appropriate and a very sensible objective that has been set. It's just the right one that has been set under the given circumstances," IMF chief Christine Lagarde told reporters here.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has in his Budget for 2016-17 stuck with the roadmap to narrow the fiscal deficit to 3.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) in the next financial year while raising public investment and focusing on distressed farm economy and infrastructure.

"We also highly value the investments being made into major infrastructure projects because we believe it is the right way to stimulate short-term growth," Lagarde said. Such investment could be called short-term stimulus and will improve medium to longer-term productivity in the country, she said.

This also "means trying to eliminate as many bottlenecks as possible and reap the benefits of agriculture, manufacturing taking place in various parts of this very large and beautiful country. So their fiscal stance is right," she said.

India being a net importer of oil and gas, it is using windfall from low energy cost to finance infrastructure projects, which is a right stance from IMF perspective. With a solid business model and a population that is also growing, there is no obstacle to growth at the moment, she said.

"My message to you is that there is the potential for growth, there is a growing population, there is scale of markets, there is a determination to reform, there are technological breakthroughs and there is creativity in an economy that is clearly on a road to growth," she said.

While India is a net beneficiary of low oil prices, the only downside risk it faces is from asynchronous monetary policies and the spillover impact it could have. "I think that clearly, India is mindful of preparing for that and is very attentive to its fundamentals in order to be able to resist that," she said.

Minister of State for Finance Jayant Sinha, who along with Lagarde addressed press after three-day Advancing Asia Conference, said it is India's turn now. India has similar potential like that of the US and China to be able to sustain high growth rates for a long period of time, he said.

"Now, we are still in a GDP per capita which is quite low. So we have a lot of headroom in terms of GDP per capita growth and because of the reform to transform approach that our government has taken, we have the right domestic policies in place to be able to sustain this level of growth for a long period of time," he said. 

Stating that the government was focussing on country's productive capacity, Sinha said policies being followed will enable India to sustain high level of growth for a long period of time.

Instead of an approach that blames global economy making it difficult for the country's economy to expand, the government is saying that India is a key driver, like the US and China had been in the past.

Lagarde said India is mindful of inclusive growth in all respects with focus on eliminating excessive inequality, including women in the workforce and removing obstacles for the future that is promising.

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