Rising interest rates could hurt new investment: Kamath
CII warned that rising interest rates may hurt new investments even though resources are in the pipeline. Invest during inflation? I Investor's itinerary
"While the existing investments in the pipelines were being adhered to... May be, newer projects which were at concept stage, which were at the backburner may not come to the front burner," CII President K V Kamath told reporters after a meeting of industry leaders with Finance Minister P Chidambaram.
Kamath said investors were concerned whether high inflation would mean that consumer demand would slowdown, whether high interest would mean that consumers could afford to buy or purchase what they wanted to purchase.
The CII President said he did not see any easing of monetary tightening so long as high inflation persists.
"If inflation is an issue...till we see inflation easing, then it would be unrealistic to expect any easing of monetary policy," Kamath, who is CEO and MD of ICICI Bank, said.
He, however, quoted the Finance Minister as assuring the industry that they "should look at it very positively that an 8-9 per cent growth is here to stay and this is backed by numbers."
"Now this should augur very well if all these projects come to the front burner," he added.
India was the world's largest economy with a 32.9 per cent share of the worldwide GDP in the first century and 28.9 per cent in the 11th century.
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