The Confederation of Indian
Industry (CII) has taken up the issue of retrospective amendments to the Income
Tax Act and the General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) negatively impacting
investment sentiments with the prime minister and the finance ministry, the
chamber’s new president, Adi Godrej, said on Thursday.
Even as the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) has hinted the scope of future rate cuts might be limited, Godrej, who
succeeded B Muthuraman as the president, called for additional reductions of
100 basis points in the repo rate and the cash reserve ratio this year to spur
investment.
“We
are very clear the retrospective amendments have created very strong negative
sentiments on investments in India both internationally and domestically,”
Godrej said. He added these sentiments at such critical times were best
avoided, and CII has suggested the proposals, including some provisions in the
GAAR, should be amended.
“We have expressed our views to
the finance ministry, as well as at our meeting with the prime minister yesterday,”
he said.
The chamber had also told the
prime minister the perception about brand India should be improved by carrying
out further economic and governance reforms.
Even as retail price inflation
rose to double digits in urban areas in March, CII said it wanted RBI to cut
the repo rate and the cash reserve ratio further and manage inflation by
augmenting supply.
CII expects the economy to grow
7.4-7.8 per cent this financial year, against the government’s projection of
7.6 per cent. It also expects industry to grow 6.5-7.0 per cent, against the
estimated 3.9 per cent in the previous financial year. However, it estimates
services sector growth to slow to 9-9.2 per cent, from 9.4 per cent in 2011-12.
CII’s new president designate and
Infosys co-chairman S Gopalakrishnan said European economies and, to some
extent the US economy, would see muted growth in next three-five years, and
this would hit growth in services exports from India.
Infosys’ earnings were hit by
slow growth in Europe and the US. Gopalakrishnan, however, refused to entertain
any query on Infosys.
Courtesy: www.
business-standard.com
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