India needs structural reforms to be $5 trillion: FM Nirmala Sitharaman
New Delhi: India is set to become $3 trillion economy in the current fiscal, and structural reforms are needed to reach $5 trillion in next few years, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in the Union Budget 2019-20 on Friday.
Presenting the first Budget of the Modi government in its second term, she said the Indian economy, which stood at $1.85 trillion five years back, has reached $2.7 trillion now, and is within capacity to reach $5 trillion in the next few years.
"The Indian economy will grow to become a $3 trillion economy in the current year. It is now the sixth largest in the world. Five years ago, it was at the 11th position. In Purchasing Power Parity terms, we are in fact, the 3rd largest economy already, only next to China and the USA.
To attain $5 trillion economy and more, India needs to continue undertaking many structural reforms, Sitharaman said in her first ever Budget presentation.
The minister said the government in the last five years brought about many big reforms in particular, in indirect taxation, bankruptcy and real estate.
"While these reforms were happening here in the Parliament, the common man's life was being changed through Mudra loans to help him do his business, and through several programmes it was being ensured that his/her kitchen become smokeless, his/her house got electricity connection and women's dignity was respected with the provision of toilets in homes," she said.
The common man was served even as major transformational reforms were being rolled out. "And for this to continue, we need to invest heavily in infrastructure, in digital economy and on job creation in small and medium firms.
It took over 55 years for the Indian economy to reach $1 trillion but when the country and her people's hearts are filled with aasha, vishwas and aakansha that is, when hearts are filled with hope, trust and aspirations, we, in 5 years, added $1 trillion. Today we are nearing a $3 trillion level," she said.
The minister said the target of reaching a $5 trillion economy is eminently achievable on the back of hard labour of the people of the country.
"Their goals of human pursuit filled with their inherent desire to progress led by the dedicated leadership present in this House, the target is eminently achievable," the finance minister said.
She also recognised that India's private sector industries, be it small, medium or large, have played a substantial role in growing the economy.
"I recall the words of an eminent industry leader, who said that his company's growth has always aligned itself with India's growth, before and post-independence.
So if before-independence, India Inc understood 'Swadeshi', today they understand 'Make in India'. "We do not look down upon legitimate profit-earning.
Gone are the days of policy paralysis and license-quota-control regimes. India Inc is India's job-creator. They are the nation's wealth-creators," Sitharaman said.