Jairam Ramesh, a union minister and senior Congress leader, criticised
opposition leader Narendra Modi for blocking the general services tax
(GST), which is aimed at easing doing business, raising revenues and
boosting growth.
If India's ruling Congress party is pushed into opposition after a
general election, it would give its backing to a major tax reform it
tried to bring in during 10 years in office, a government minister and
party strategist said on Thursday.
Jairam Ramesh, a union minister and senior Congress leader, criticised opposition leader Narendra Modi for blocking the general services tax (GST), which is aimed at easing doing business, raising revenues and boosting growth.
"If
the people of India want us to be in the opposition, we will not do
what Mr Modi did to us on GST, he single-handedly derailed the most
important economic initiative of (our government)," Ramesh said in an
interview as the world's biggest election reaches the final stage.
Results are due on May 16.
BJP-ruled
states, including Gujarat, which Modi governs, stymied efforts by two
successive finance ministers to bring in the new indirect tax regime,
which would replace some state taxes.
Modi, who opinion polls favour to form the next government with his Bharatiya Janata Party
and allies, now says he will bring in GST if he wins office, blaming
the delay on the government's poor coordination with states, whose
support is needed to implement the reform.
The measure, stuck for
years, would convert the country into a single fiscal union and add 2
percentage points to overall economic growth, economists estimate.
The
BJP had become the party to beat in this election but claims of victory
were premature, Ramesh said. He said the mammoth election - with 815
million eligible voters - remained a close fight between the
Congress-led coalition and the Hindu nationalist opposition. It was far
from certain that Modi will become prime minister, he said.
Most
opinion polls have forecast the BJP to emerge as the single largest
group in the election and best-placed to form a coalition government,
riding a wave of anger and discontent over graft scandals and a slowing
economy.
But Ramesh's remarks suggested that the Congress was not
about to give up the fight and that it would try and stop Modi - whom it
deeply reviles - from cobbling together a simple majority in Parliament
required to rule.
"With almost 75 to 80 per cent of the
(election) over, I am reasonably certain it will be a very, very close
contest," said Ramesh, who heads the rural development ministry.
"It
is becoming increasingly apparent that the so-called sweep for the BJP
is not going to happen. The polls have vastly overestimated the BJP's
performance while downplaying the Congress performance."
Opinion polls have a mixed record in India which has an electorate bigger than the United States and Europe put together.
Ramesh
said the party's own assessment was that it had picked up support in
states such as Punjab in the north, Jharkand and Chhattisgarh in the
east and Karnataka in the south that went to the polls in the second
half of the campaign.
The BJP's power base is in the Hindi
heartland in the north and the west of the country and it needs to lure
in regional players in the south and east to build a stable coalition.
Failure
to win big could be a problem for the Hindu nationalist Modi, seen as a
polarising figure mistrusted by the country's sizeable Muslim
minorities.
He has been unable to shake off criticism that he
failed to protect Muslims in a spasm of bloodshed in the western Gujarat
state that he governs, even though a Supreme Court ordered inquiry
absolved him of any responsibility.
VIMAL SINGH
PGDM 1st yr
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