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Press Communique Issued by Ministry of Finance on
Mr. Chidambaram's visit to attend annual WB/IMF meetings
Washington DC
October 5, 2004
With world economic growth peaking at a thirty-year high, in the just
concluded Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank, the Union Finance Minister of India, Mr. P. Chidambaram stressed the
need for reinforcing the signs of the broad-based diversified expansion
through improved international cooperation in achieving stability and
strengthening policies and institutions. This, he said, would enable
different regions to mutually support and reinforce growth-enhancing
prospects and trigger a virtuous cycle.
The Indian Finance Minister said that along with China and emerging Asia,
India is poised to become a major driver of global growth in the medium
term. India has pursued its own design of domestic economic reforms since
the early 1990s duly incorporating the impact of political cycles. The new
government is committed to reforms but with a human face, involving emphasis
on health, education, and employment. The key to growth, the government
believes, is enhanced investment: public and private, domestic and foreign.
Despite a delayed monsoon and oil price pressures, the economy is expected
to grow in the range of 6.5-7.0 per cent this year. A strong revival of
investment demand and business confidence is evident. The external position
has added to overall confidence and the country’s credit standing has
improved in international markets. Fiscal consolidation remains high on the
agenda; and the new government has demonstrated its commitment by notifying
the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act and the detailed
rules for its implementation in July this year. Further liberalization of
the external sector has been announced, and the government is committed to
promoting multilateral trade liberalization policies in the spirit of the
Doha round. No doubt, the current outlook for oil prices makes the
macroeconomic management in India very comples. Monetary policy will
continue to emphasize price stability with growth, he said.
To minimise the risks to the expansion from continuing uncertainties in the
international oil markets, he called for better international cooperation on
the part of both oil producing and consuming countries, for the multilateral
institutions to stand ready to support countries exposed to any potential
threat of oil or commodity price shocks. He expressed the hope that, for
containing the inflationary pressures across regions the reversal of
interest rates by central banks will be undertaken cautiously and in
measured steps.
Mr. Chidambaram said that the reversal of capital flows from emerging
markets to mature markets seen in the recent past reflected self-insurance
role of reserves built-up in mitigating the risk of external shocks.
Equally, it was a sign of the inadequacy of the existing international
financial architecture in providing any viable collective insurance to
well-managed economies, he said.
The Indian Minister of Finance called for steps to scale up assistance to
developing countries for achieving the millennium development goals (MDGs),
and a resolute implementation of the Monterrey Compact. With the promised
additionality of resources failing to materialize even after two years of
the Compact, the MDGs continue to remain a distant dream even for the best
performers among developing countries. He recommended firm measures to move
away from allocation of the bulk of the existing concessional resources on
considerations other than the twin criteria of ‘need’ and ‘performance’. For
implementing the MDGs in low income countries, he called for an ex-ante
framework to assess sustainability of their debt situation, which could help
borrowers, lenders and the international financial institutions take
informed decisions without adding further to their debt burden, and at the
same time avoiding the moral hazard implicit in lending and forgiving.
Instead of its delivery in a piecemeal, uncertain, and inequitable manner,
there was a need to move to its distribution through multilaterals with
transparent allocation criteria and a track record for ensuring effective
results on the ground. He welcomed the move by the Bank and the Fund to put
donor coordination and harmonization high on their agenda and called on the
Bretton Woods Institutions to further enhance their efforts to make the
promised levels of additionality in overseas development assistance (ODA) a
reality, particularly in the context of IDA’s fourteenth replenishment. The
time for the donor countries to deliver on their Monterrey commitment for a
substantial scale up in ODA is now, he said. He expressed his deep concern
about the negative net flows from the Bank in the recent years, and called
for urgent steps to check the rising trend in administrative costs, reduce
borrowing charges and rationalize the safeguard compliance framework. There
was an urgent need to step up infrastructure lending in a big way, and for
redoubled efforts to address the needs and concerns of the middle-income
countries, who have hitherto been the Bank’s best customers. This would
reverse the trend of negative net flows, he said.
Mr. Chidambaram stressed the need for the international financial
institutions to exert their positive influence in creating an appropriate
international environment for multilateral trade negotiations. The global
trade agenda calls for renewed vigor on the part of the Bank and the Fund to
strengthen their advocacy role for a phasing out of protectionist policies
in developed countries, he said.
Expressing his disappointment over the lack of effective voice in the
functioning of Bretton Woods Institutions, Mr. Chidambaram called on world
leaders to back up their positive assertion at Monterrey by sufficient
political resolve to move purposefully to address the structural
inconsistency that lies at the root of this lack of voice. The allocation of
quotas at the Fund and the pattern of shareholding at the Bank have ceased
to reflect the economic realities of the day. The search for a greater voice
for developing countries must begin with a review of the quota allocation
formula. Without the necessary resolve to move in this direction, the voice
issue will continue to remain a mere distraction from the core business of
the Bretton Woods Institutions, he said.
Mr. Chidambaram held bilateral meetings with Finance Ministers from Bhutan,
Brazil, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and with the
Development Ministers of UK and Sweden. He welcomed investment from all
countries to effectively utilise the rich potential that India has for
augmenting growth and employment.
Mr. Chidambaram met with US Treasury Secretary John Snow when they discussed
bilateral and multilateral issues of mutual interest. They underscored the
importance of continuing the bilateral dialogue under the Financial and
Economic Forum. Mr. Chidambaram also outlined the new Government’s approach
to economic reform and foreign investment and the particular emphasis being
given to the rural and agricultural sector and infrastructure.
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