Industry will be disappointed if Chidambaram is not finance minister
Industry and stock market leaders say they will be disappointed if Tamil
Maanila Congress leader and Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram
remains adamant on not joining the new United Front government.
Industry leaders expressed relief late on Saturday night when I K Gujral was
named leader of the United Front, hoping that
the reforms would continue. However, the TMC's decision to
support the government from outside means Chidambaram
will not remain finance minister.
This development has upset leaders of the two leading chambers of
commerce -- the Federation of Indian Chambers of Industry
and the Confederation of Indian Industry.
CII president Shekhar Datta says Chidambaram had
carried out the economic reforms very aggressively and produced a
path-breaking Budget for fiscal 1997-98. He hoped that
Gujral's finance minister is as pro-reform
and pro-industry as his predecessor.
Gujral's statement that his government will continue with
Chidambaram's investment-friendly policies has enthused
industry which has been anxious about the fate of the economic reforms
these past three weeks of political uncertainty.
Despite their affection for Chidambaram, industry leaders feel
that since the Budget was the offspring
of the entire United Front team and not an individual
effort, the Finance Bill will be passed retaining its essence.
FICCI president A S Kasliwal felt the Budget reflected the current economic
circumstances. ''These circumstances are favourable for
industry,'' he said.
While industry's response to the TMC's decision seems
rational, the stock markets are likely to react negatively when it
opens on Monday. Chidambaram's absence at the finance ministry,
says Delhi Stock Exchange president Ashok Kumar Agarwal, will
certainly hit the stockmarkets.
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