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MUMBAI
SHOWCASED AS A FUTURE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CENTRE
By Dipankar De Sarkar, Davos (Switzerland), January 24, 2008
(IANS)
Transacting
95% of the stocks of an economy projected to become the world's
third largest, the city of Mumbai was Thursday showcased before
businessmen and investors gathered in Davos as a future world financial
centre to rival London and New York. "With $60 billion earmarked
to develop the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, and if all other things
fall into place, then a world financial centre has to come to Mumbai,"
said Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh told investors
at a meeting held on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF).
He
was backed up Aviation Minister and Maharashtra politician Praful
Patel and Sunil Bharti Mittal, CEO of Indian conglomerate Bharti
Enterprises and head of the Confederation of Indian Industries.
"From a size of $1 trillion today, the Indian economy is projected
to grow $30 trillion by 2040," Mittal said. "There is
no reason why Mumbai cannot stand alongside New York, London and
Singapore as a world financial centre in the future," he pointed
out.
"India
deserves a global financial centre," Mittal said, adding that
the economy was backed by "regulation, framework and institutional
mechanisms".
Patel,
Deshmukh and Mittal are in an 80-strong Indian delegation to the
WEF, the largest team at the annual business event that has drawn
some 2,500 business and political leaders from 88 countries this
year.
Mittal
contrasted India's private sector fuelled growth with that of China.
He said Shanghai was being developed as a world financial centre
by China "which as a state was determined to make acquisitions
outside China". Although aware of the challenges of poor infrastructure
the Indian team has highlighted progress made in telecommunications
and information technology, as well as urban development plans involving
tens of billions of dollars, to push Mumbai's case before foreign
investors here.
"The
strength of the Indian economy is its future potential," said
Praful Patel but he acknowledged that the infrastructure sector
could be further opened up to foreign investors.
With
as many as 46 major international companies having opened their
offices in Mumbai in the last year alone, he said: "We certainly
deserve to be in the same league as London, New York and Singapore".
Indian
households had spent $13 billion on foreign financial products in
2007 and the figure is set to grow to $48 billion in 2015 and $80
billion if the economy grows at 9 %, said Sanjay Nayar, CEO of Citi
India.
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