用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Private capital expenditure to pick up in coming years: MPC member Varma
2024-01-16 00:00:00.0     商业标准报-经济和政策     原网页

       

       RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) member Jayanth R Varma has said that capacity utilization has been slowly increasing and private capital expenditure would pick up in the coming years.

       Varma further noted that in the last couple of years, the government has shouldered the burden of investment, while private capital expenditure has been muted.

       Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel

       "At the same time, capacity utilization has been slowly creeping up and it is approaching levels that prompt the private sector to undertake capital expenditure at least in some sectors," he told PTI.

       Moreover, Varma, a professor at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad said large public sector infrastructure investment of the recent years has the potential to crowd-in private sector investments.

       "On the whole, I am hopeful that private capital expenditure would pick-up in the coming years, and pick-up the baton from the public sector," he said.

       Asked whether India can escape the middle income trap, Varma said it is imperative that India makes this transition because failure would be extremely painful for the country's vast population.

       Moreover, "the task is not easy as it would require a growth rate of 7-8 per cent sustained over many decades, and not many countries have done this successfully," the MPC member said, adding that he is very optimistic that India as a nation can overcome this challenge.

       Noting that India's democratic polity makes governments responsive to the needs and aspirations of its people, Varma said over the decades, India has created the capabilities both in private and public sector to surmount the obstacles that will surely arise in this path.

       The middle-income trap captures a situation where a middle-income country can no longer compete internationally in standardized, labor-intensive goods because wages are relatively too high, but it also cannot compete in higher value-added activities on a broad enough scale because productivity is relatively too low.

       According to the World Bank, the world's middle-income countries (MICs) are a diverse group by size, population, and income level.

       Also Read

       RBI MPC: Repo rate kept unchanged at 6.5%, FY24 GDP estimate hiked to 7%

       RBI likely to keep rate and policy stance unchanged to control inflation

       RBI monetary policy: 5 key announcements from the governor's speech today

       RBI announces 2-day repo for $6 billion as overnight rates stay elevated

       RBI to banks: Report all digital frauds not just those above Rs 1 lakh

       'Engineering goods exports grow 10.20% in Dec amid global challenges'

       Time to rebuild trust, cooperation with each other: WEF Chair Klaus Schwab

       Govt extends low tax on edible oil import by another year to cap prices

       India can become $5 trn economy much before 2028: Hardeep Singh Puri

       Real, nominal GDP growth, inflation play out differently this time around

       Lower middle-income economies are those with a GNI (Gross National Income) per capita between USD 1,036 and USD 4,045; and upper middle-income economies are those with a GNI per capita between USD 4,046 and USD 12,535.

       Countries with annual per capita income of over USD 12,000 are defined as high-income.

       Middle-income countries are home to 75 per cent of the world's population and 62 per cent of the world's poor. At the same time, MICs represent about one-third of global GDP and are major engines of global growth.

       (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

       


标签:经济
关键词: income     Varma     middle-income     world's     private capital expenditure     sector     India    
滚动新闻