On its first day in office, the new government on Tuesday sent out the right signals to investors by bringing up the issue of retrospective taxation, something that had been hurting foreign companies like Vodafone, which is caught in a $2-billion tax dispute.
Telecommunication, Law and Information Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said: “Retrospective tax should be avoided.
"India should have an investor-friendly regime.”
He made it known that the new government’s goal was to remove uncertainty and provide investors a stable financial and legal policy.
Also, after its first Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, the new government announced setting up a special investigation team to unearth black money.
Addressing the media after the meeting, Prasad said this committee, to be headed by former Supreme Court judge M B Shah, would have as members a deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India, the Central Board of Direct Taxes chairman and the revenue secretary, besides directors of the Central Bureau of Investigation and the Intelligence Bureau.
Arun Jaitley, the new finance minister who took charge at the North Block office at 9.30 am on Tuesday -- minutes after the communiqué on portfolios came -- also struck an investor-friendly chord through his growth-versus-inflation comment.
The government would aim to strike a balance between boosting economic growth rate (stuck at five per cent for long) and containing inflation (at nine per cent in April), Jaitley said in his much-awaited first statement as the finance minister.
Soon after, he swung into the Budget-making exercise, meetings with RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan and finance ministry bureaucrats.
In between, he met Punjab Chief Minister and Shiromani Akali Dal leader Parkash Singh Badal and his son Sukhbir Singh Badal.
Jaitley had contested his maiden Lok Sabha election from Amritsar, where the Badals had campaigned for him.
Across the road at the defence ministry office in South Block, where Jaitley is holding additional charge, he continued with the pro-investor