SUNDAY OBSERVER Sunday Observer - Magazine
Sunday, 19 January 2003  
The widest coverage in Sri Lanka.
World
News

Business

Features

Editorial

Security

Politics

World

Letters

Sports

Obituaries

Archives

Silumina  on-line Edition

Government - Gazette

Daily News

Budusarana On-line Edition





Indian PM says he is committed to reforms

KOCHI, India, Saturday (AFP) Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee said Saturday his government was committed to accelerating economic growth and urged the states to speed up the process.

Vajpayee, in a speech to the Global Investor Meet (GIM) here in the southern state of Kerala, said strikes against reforms were harming the economy.

"While workers' interests should certainly be protected, is it in workers' or the states' interest to discourage investors through frequent strikes?" Vajpayee asked.

Vajpayee said the reforms that New Delhi was trying to implement were the outcome of "a well considered" and "long term strategy" to tap the country's immense resources and talents.

"Let there be no doubt that our objectives continue to be the removal of poverty, employment generation, environmental protection and social and economic justice," he said.

But to achieve these objectives, India needs to accelerate economic growth and the key to this is increasing the competitiveness of industries and businesses with global standards by providing a conducive climate to investors, the prime minister said.

India introduced economic reforms in 1991 but the pace of implementation has been slow.

Contentious issues, like privatisation of state-run units and labour reforms, have met with stiff resistance from within and outside India's ruling coalition.

The government has only managed to raise 50 billion rupees (one billion dollars) from privatisation in the current year against a targetted 120 billion rupees from the proposed sale of stakes in 27 state firms.

India has attracted foreign direct investment worth just 23.7 billion dollars since it embarked on its policy of liberalisation in 1991 -- roughly the same amount China received in a six-month period in 1999.

India's low labour cost advantage is being whittled away by the fact that a strong trade union movement in the country makes it near impossible to retrench workers on a large scale.

In February this year, the cabinet said it wanted to amend a 54-year-old industrial employment law and give employers the right to dismiss workers without government approval.

Industrial establishments employing less than 1,000 workers would be able to lay off staff or carry out closures without prior government permission, raising the threshold from 100 workers.

But trade unions have opposed the proposal tooth and nail.

Industry experts say that with an inevitably more open trade regime, India's salvation lies in being internationally competitive which requires sustained labour reforms.

Last year, India's planning commission set an eight percent annual growth target until 2007. It said it was needed to lift all sections of the one billion population out of poverty.

www.peaceinsrilanka.org

www.2000plaza.lk

www.eagle.com.lk

www.helpheroes.lk


News | Business | Features | Editorial | Security
Politics | World | Letters | Sports | Obituaries


Produced by Lake House
Copyright 2001 The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd.
Comments and suggestions to :Web Manager


Hosted by Lanka Com Services