Briefing party MPs about FDI issue and Government’s steps to check blackmoney, inflation, the Finance Minister, Mr Pranab Mukherjee, today said the move to allow 51 per cent FDI in retail will help contain inflation and bridge gap between farmgate and retail prices.
The Commerce Minister, Mr Anand Sharma, will brief the party MPs in detail on FDI tomorrow, as Mr Mukherjee mainly concentrated on the other two issues in the Congress Parliamentary Party meeting this morning.
Mr Mukherjee told the MPs that FDI in retail is one of the measures that will help bring down prices by checking the huge differences between the farmgate price of a product and its wholesale and retail prices.
In the one-hour long briefing, Mr Mukherjee apprised the party members in detail about the steps taken by the Government to check the outflow of blackmoney to tax havens abroad.
He also told them why it was not possible to accept the opposition demand to make the names of such accountholders public.
Mr Mukherjee said the Government is bound by international agreements and making their names public right now will obstruct the inflow of further information regarding it, sources said.
After the meeting, the Law Minister, Mr Salman Khurshid, downplayed party MP Mr Sanjay Singh and Kerala PCC chief Mr Ramesh Chennithala’s opposition to FDI, saying there was nothing wrong if Congress members want to contribute to the overall debate on FDI issue.
On if he endorses the remarks of the Congress MP on FDI yesterday, he said, “If I agree with his point of view, I will not be in the Cabinet.”
Mr Mukherjee addressed the MPs after a meeting with Congress President Sonia Gandhi at her 10, Janpath residence in the morning.
Mr Khurshid, while talking to reporters recalled the political upheaval that took place at the time of the Indo-US nuclear deal.
Reminding the MPs about the assertion of Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh with regard to the nuclear Bill, he said, “If he is asserting again, I think we should welcome it.”
At the same time, Mr Khurshid maintained that the Prime Minister was always open for dialogue and accommodation.
He said the Prime Minister is “not a man, who is prone to confrontation and I think we should take it in that spirit.”
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