Saturday, June 14, 2008

Webinfosys's Local News :Pace of reforms in India appears to have slowed: US

Maintaining that "openness" is necessary for economies and people to prosper, a top Bush administration official feels that despite a healthy growth rate the pace of reforms in India appears to have "slowed".

"Since 1991, when then Finance Minister Manmohan Singh began sweeping reforms, India has enjoyed remarkable growth of about 8.5 per cent annually. That's more than double the growth rate from India's independence until then. The message is clear: the faster India opens, the faster India grows. However, we are concerned that the pace of reform appears to have slowed," Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez said.

"We believe improvements in market access, easing of investment restrictions, tariffs reductions, and the elimination of barriers in food trade should continue because it is good for India.

"India, like the US must decide if it will continue the openness that has brought so much prosperity, or risk sliding backward," he said at United States India Business Council (USIBC) 33rd Anniversary celebrations here.

Gutierrez also announced the setting up of the Department of Commerce's India Business Center which will provide American companies business counselling and market intelligence that's critical to successfully doing business in India.

"The US and India are two great democracies. And we know that our systems require compromise for the greater good. Sometimes our leaders have to make tough choices that are in our long-term national interests," Gutierrez said.

Speaking about global food crisis, Gutirrez said, "Many countries have unilaterally lowered food tariffs in response to the rising food crisis. Yet many of these countries balk at eliminating these same tariffs within the Doha negotiations. Here's where national interests could be linked to the global good. By making permanent agriculture reforms, we can boost farm trade and expand access to food."

Gutierrez also argued that nothing could immediately help the world's poor more than the completion of a meaningful and ambitious Doha Round.

"This is why we need India's help. India is a major leader, not just among developing nations, but across the whole world. We can't have a successful Doha Round without India's leadership. While success at Doha is critical, together we can also make progress in addressing impediments to economic growth including reducing shortages of food.

The Commerce Secretary said that it is the right time to help lower food prices by producing more and allowing markets to operate more effectively and efficiently.

"Opportunities exist in India to lower costs and increase choices in banking, finance and insurance, where barriers remain high. And the strengthening of pharmaceutical data and intellectual property protection will allow for the full development of the distinctive brand names and the innovative high technology companies that India wants to create and attract," he said.

"For our part, we believe now is time to take our partnership to a new level. One thing is for sure: when we work together, when we trade, when we lower barriers, and when we partner, it improves our economies in a world that has no shortage of competitors," Gutierrez said.

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Webinfosys's Local News : Left calls meet on Darjeeling crisis

Left Front will hold a meeting on Saturday to discuss ways to tackle the ongoing crisis in Darjeeling hills.

On Friday, West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee had invited Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM), spearheading a violent agitation for Gorkhaland in Darjeeling hills and adjacent areas, for talks on June 18 but it was promptly rejected by the outfit, dealing a blow to an early end to unrest in the tourist hotspots.

After two days of sporadic violence, Darjeeling, Siliguri and nearby areas, hit by the Gorkhaland agitation, remained peaceful on Friday with no fresh violence.

Bhattacharjee had invited (GJM chief) Bimal Gurung and his followers to meet him separately on June 18 at Writers' Buildings to discuss the Darjeeling issue, Chief Minister's secretariat sources said.

The talks were scheduled separately with the GJM after an all-party meeting a day earlier.

However, the offer was rejected by GJM General Secretary Roshan Giri after a central committee meeting of the outfit in Darjeeling which considered the Chief Minister's offer, dismissing as "irrelevant" the agenda of the meeting.

Reacting to the rejection of his offer by GJM, the Chief Minister had merely said "let us see what happens."


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Webinfosys's Local News : G8 calls for IMF probe into surging oil prices

Top world finance officials called on Saturday for an urgent boost to global oil production and a probe into the recent wild swings in energy prices, including the role of speculators.

Finance ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised nations gathering here are worried that soaring oil and food costs could threaten global economic growth and stoke inflation.

"We urge all (oil) producing countries to increase production and to invest to enhance refinery capacity," they said in a joint statement, according to a G8 source who asked not to be named.

They said greater transparency in the oil market and more reliable data were needed, including on "the size of financial flow coming into the oil market."

The G8 called for an investigation involving the International Monetary Fund into the recent spike in crude oil prices.

The ministers asked the IMF and the International Energy Agency "to work together with appropriate national authorities in carrying out further analysis of real and financial factors behind the recent surge in oil prices and volatility, and the effects on the global economy."

World oil prices have been on a rollercoaster ride recently, soaring close to 140 dollars a barrel on worries about tight supplies, with some blaming market speculators for aggravating the wild swings.

Oil prices have soared five-fold since 2003 due to a variety of factors, including turbulence in the Middle East and rising demand in emerging economies such as China and India.


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