Indian economy
on track
Indian Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha recently put on a brave
face in the face of attack on parliament and said the economy
showed signs of recovery.
"I am hoping to end the year with
the last mishap," Sinha told reporters, referring to the attack
on parliament which left 13 people dead.
"No economy can flourish when there
are uncertainties whether they are global or national.
"Desite this the economy will continue
to grow. There are some signs of recovery in the economy. Even
at a slow rate India’s economy will be the fastest growing economy
in the world," Sinha said.
India’s economic growth slipped to
5.2 percent in the fiscal year ended March 2001, after recording
6.1 percent in the previous year. The government has targetted
an annual growth rate of seven percent until 2010. Sinha said
in the current financial year industrial production had declined
sharply to two percent.
"But agricultural sector is expected
to do better than the previous years and the growth rate could
be in the region of about 6.5 percent to 7.0 percent," he said.
The finance minister said his government’s
increased investment in sectors such as housing, rural development,
telecommunications and power would lead to an increase in demand
in the economy and "greater economic activity".
However he said the government’s
main worry was the revenue deficit. "Due
to the result of industrial slowdown we have noticed a shortfall
in the corporate tax and customs duty. The increase in personal
income tax is modest... the bothersome thing is the higher revenue
deficit.
"I will not rule out some slippage
in the fiscal deficit", Sinha said. The government had targetted
a fiscal deficit of 4.7 percent of gross domestic product in the
budget to March 2002.
FICCI for retaining
35% peak duty tariff
Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce & Industry FICCI’s per-budget memorandum has taken a
hard line on import duty reduction. The chamber has asked the
government not to have any general reduction in peak duty tariff
of 35 percent for three years and added that the government should
move towards a graded (three tier based) import duty structure.
Furthermore, the chamber feels that
if duty reduction does indeed happen the phasing of peak duty
reduction to 20 percent in the next three year should be done
in such a manner that the priority is on raw materials and not
on finished goods. The chamber wants duties on raw materials to
be 10-15 percent lower than duties on finished goods.
In what would be music to the ears
of electronic hardware industry, FICCI is saying that if import
of final products is allowed at zero duty then components of such
products should also be allowed to be imported at zero duty. The
desirable duty structure for the basic raw materials should be
the lowest at 10-15 percent, for the intermediate goods it should
20 percent and 35 percent for the finished goods. The chamber
feels that there should be a reasonable duty difference between
raw materials components and finished goods.
Bangladesh imposes
import tariffs
Bangladesh imposed import duties
recently on more than 30 items to boost foreign exchange reserves
and protect local industries, officials said.
The National Board of Revenue officials
said the duties of between 10 and 25 percent would be imposed
on a number of "non-essential" items that are being increasingly
imported. The items include powdered milk, plastic made furniture,
fresh dates, cooking appliances, fresh mangoes, apples, chocolate,
shampoo, perfume, imitation jewelry and shoes.
Bangladesh court
rules against export of gas
A court has barred the government
from exporting natural gas through a pipeline to neighboring India
for three months, a court official said recently.
The High court imposed the restriction
on a joint petition filled by an economist, a university teacher
and a journalist.
The ban will be effective for three
months during which the court will hear the petition.
Even though Bangladesh has signed
an agreement with international oil companies to prospect and
produce gas, "there is no provision to export the natural gas
through a pipeline," the petition said.
It said exports of gas will be harmful
to the country.
"Only 14 percent of our population
has access to electricity and 80 percent of power production depends
on natural gas. This is one reason why we can’t afford to export
gas," said the petition.
Sri Lanka's economy
more trouble
Sri Lanka’s exports have fallen sharply
for the sixth consecutive month while the budget deficit has widened
signalling a worse than expected performance, officials said recently.
Export earnings fell nearly 20 percent
in October after recording falls of 14.5 percent in September
and 20 percent both in July and August, Central Bank officials
said.
Imports too fell dramatically by
30 percent in September due to a 40 percent surcharge on customs
duties as well as the depreciation of the rupee against major
currencies, officials said.
Government revenue improved by 13
percent in the first nine months of the year, but the gains were
eroded by higher spending which widened the deficit by 22 percent,
officials said.
Compounding problems for the Sri
Lankan economy is the near three percent drop in remittances of
Sri Lankans employed abroad. The expatriate funds provide a key
source of foreign exchange for the government.
Official figures showed that the
GDP growth in the second quarter of this year was a dismal 0.4
percent compared to 7.3 percent in the corresponding period last
year.
The Central Bank has forecast a GDP
growth rate of 2 to 2.5 percent this year, down from earlier projections
of 4.5 percent.
New Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
has said it would be an achievement to maintain a zero growth
rate given the dismal performance of the economy.