Addressing an investors’ conference, he assured maintenance of fiscal discipline despite being in an election year.
According to his ministry, the external sector is seeing a turnaround.
Export growth is touching double-digit percentages and the fear that the country will export less this financial year than the previous one has vanished.
Chidambaram said he also expected to better Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan’s target, of cutting the current account gap to $56 billion.
“If I may share a secret, I’m going to try to do better than $56 bn,” he said.
The twin swap windows earlier opened by RBI to attract inflows has already swelled the foreign exchange reserve kitty by $18 bn and the minister expects the number to go up to $25 bn by the end of the month, till when the window is open.
“Our exports will do well at the end of the year. “We see green shoots in some import compression that we had tried; for example, gold.
“We have deliberately compressed the import of gold. This has helped us to contain the trade deficit, as well as the estimated current account deficit,” said Chidambaram.
Industrial growth
He also expressed satisfaction at the growth of core industries and that factory output showed an upward trend, though still below the desired level.
“Core industries did well last month by registering eight per cent growth.
“That is a very encouraging sign. In core industries, power is doing well.
“Although core industries have grown eight per cent, the IIP (Index of Industrial Production) has only moved up two per cent. But even that is a movement upward.
“It is no way near to where we want the IIP to be but it is trending upward. So, there are some green shoots in industry,” he said. Chidambaram said the mining sector was dragging down the IIP but that was due to a variety of reasons, one being the ban on export of iron ore.
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