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Chidambaram told lawmakers the country was also facing a current account deficit crisis due to huge imports of oil, coal and gold and a slowdown in exports. Chidambaram said India would need around $75 billion this year and next year from foreign investment and external commercial borrowing to bridge the current account deficit. The current account is a broad measure of trade and investment balances with the rest of the world. "India at the present juncture does not have the choice of welcoming and spurning foreign investment. We need to welcome foreign investment," he said. Opposition political leaders said the budget only made cosmetic changes in taxation and expenditure. It was "extremely low on substance, with nothing to offer to the poor, and a substantial reduction in budgetary support for the economically deprived," said Arun Jaitely, a leader of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party. Business leaders gave it a higher rating. "The finance minister's intentions are very clear: to move India back to a higher growth plane. And given his lack of runway, he has taken lots of small measures which together could boost growth," said N. Chandrasekaran, CEO and Managing Director of Tata Consultancy Services, India's top outsourcing company.
Chidambaram tried to dispel the general air of despondency over the Indian economy's slowdown, saying it was "not all doom and gloom." "Only China and Indonesia are growing faster than India, and achieving high growth is not beyond India's capacity," he said. "We have done it and we will do it again."
[Associated
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