Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said India could buy Russian crude oil near or past the price cap imposed by the G-7 if the recent OPEC+ output cut increases energy costs.
"We will have to constantly re-figure where we get the best deal as it is a critical input for the economy," Ms Sitharaman said in a wide-ranging interview, adding that the nation will look at "affordable prices" to serve its large population.
From the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund Spring meetings in Washington, Ms Sitharaman shared her views on India's economic challenges, the lack of jobs, the Adani-Hindenberg saga and the government's weak progress on privatization. Below are edited excerpts and the video conversation.
Growth
"We are making enough efforts to make sure the economy remains buoyant," Ms Sitharaman said. External factors, including the OPEC+ output cut and "the spillover of all the decisions" related to Russia's war in Ukraine are "the two main things which I think I'd be more worried about than anything internal."
She also said weakness in demand for manufacturing goods and services activity could be a drag on India's recovery going forward.
RBI's Pause
The Reserve Bank of India has found reasonable justification to pause for now, Ms Sitharaman said. "They are keeping a very close eye on the economy and business leaders have welcomed this pause with a sense of relief."
The central bank has given a hawkish outlook for India's inflation, but the price-gain trajectory will depend of monsoon rainfall going ahead, she said.
Fiscal Glide Path
"We hope to continue on the glide path," she said, adding that the government will adhere to the budgeted target of 5.9% for the fiscal year starting April. "We have been careful."
Privatization
In India, privatization goes through a whole lot of filters as all stakeholders have to be kept together, Ms Sitharaman said when asked about the slow progress of stake sales in state-run firms. "The idea is not to close units down, it's more that the government wants to get out of businesses where more equity is not possible but there's interest outside and the economy will benefit if the companies are kept as going concern, so those considerations do take time."
Ms Sitharaman said the upcoming national elections may pose a hurdle. "Bids come in after a certain level of certainty comes in," she said.
Adani Saga
"Government of India stays at a distance from companies," the minister said, adding that a Supreme Court-monitored panel will probe allegations made by the US short-seller Hindenburg Research against the Adani Group. "We think it may be inappropriate to comment even as the judiciary is having a look at it."
Job Creation
"The emphasis now is to fill vacant jobs that have already been sanctioned or available in the government," Ms Sitharaman said. There's a lot of skilling happening in the private sector, she said.
Cryptocurrency
More reports show that cryptocurrencies have macro-stability implications, Ms Sitharaman said. If there's a consensus among G-20 members, "we will look at a broad framework and will leave it to each country to adopt their own legislative framework," she said.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
(Disclaimer: New Delhi Television is a subsidiary of AMG Media Networks Limited, an Adani Group Company.)
Featured Video Of The Day
15,000 Crore Of Vijay Mallya, Nirav Modi's Assets Restored To Banks: Centre "Balraj Sahni Was Arrested...": N Sitharaman vs M Kharge Over Constitution 3 Indians Shine On Forbes' 2024 World's Most Powerful Women List World Leaders On Speed-Dial: How Elon Musk Is Causing Geopolitical Tremors Naval Personnel Among 13 Killed As Navy Boat Collides With Ferry Near Mumbai Video: Passengers Panic, Scream For Help As Ferry Sinks Off Mumbai Coast Government Appoints Rama Mohan Rao Amara As SBI Managing Director Gisele Pelicot Rape Case Forces France To Relook Drug-Facilitated Assaults UK Pledges New $286 Million Defence Package For Ukraine Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.