Edited excerpts from Congress MP Anand Sharma’s speech on the Budget in the Rajya Sabha, July 23, 2014 in New Delhi
There are many things which you have said with regard to your vision.
You have talked about the real estate investment trust.
You have also talked of the infrastructure investment trust.
Surely, you have thought through it and you are looking at a picture that will emerge, perhaps, in 18 months, to attract investments through these two trusts giving the pass-through benefits.
But I have a word of caution, if you will take it in that spirit. I am not opposing it. I am not questioning it.
As I said that it will be a long time before they materialise, how you will create an institutional mechanism and, perhaps, the safeguards which are inbuilt, I am sure you and your team will be able to do that.
But too much of emphasis on real estate may not be very healthy.
There are examples. Japan is one example of real estate investments trust.
I was talking to the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh ji, trying to understand more about this.
In Japan, their present problems are because of over-emphasis on real estate investments, which created a bubble, that burst.
How did the 2008-09 economic crisis start?
Firstly, it started with the Royal Bank of Scotland in the UK because of the real estate, the housing and the loans.
Toxic assets were then created by banks and insurance companies in the US, and, it was again a big bubble burst.
Therefore, over-emphasis, perhaps, and expectations from these two trusts alone will be able to meet our needs.
That may not be your intent but you have to be careful not only about the safeguards, but also to keep an eternal vigil because as economies grow, you have new instruments, financial instruments, which are introduced.
India is also exploring that way but the strength of the Indian economy was such that not even one bank was threatened, not even one insurance company was threatened, and we were able to withstand the shocks.
On manufacturing, you have talked of it but in passing. I am afraid the references to manufacturing are only on foreign direct investment.
There is no policy statement.
There is also no open endorsement of continued emphasis on the implementation of India’s National Manufacturing Policy, adopted in 2011, which has an objective to raise the share of manufacturing in our gross domestic product from 16 per cent to 25 per cent.
The principal objective of the instrument, as you are aware, as also my successor, being the national investment manufacturing zones, is stand-alone integrated greenfield industrial cities of the future.
Sixteen of these stand notified, and, four were launched, two in the Budget this year and two in the previous Budget.
The two that were reflected in last year’s Budget were -- Shendra Bidkin in Maharashtra and the second one, which is a major one, and, in fact, the largest, is Dholera in Gujarat.
Why am I referring to this?
The focus and thrust is on this and on the industrial corridors, the four corridors. I am happy that you have mentioned the Amritsar-Kolkata Industrial Corridor; you have mentioned the Bengaluru-Mumbai