Key Points

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has made a strong appeal to Indian industry to increase investment and production within the country. She emphasized the need for businesses to clearly communicate their requirements to accelerate growth. The minister highlighted Prime Minister Modi's consistent reform agenda and urged closer collaboration on skilling initiatives. Sitharaman also called for continuous engagement between industry and government throughout the year, not just during budget discussions.

Key Points: Sitharaman Urges Industry Invest India Boost Production

  • Urges industry to shed hesitation and boost domestic production capacity
  • Calls for closer government-industry collaboration on workforce skilling
  • Highlights PM Modi's consistent reform push from Gujarat days
  • Emphasizes need for graduates to be job-ready before employment
2 min read

FM Sitharaman urges industry to invest in India, boost production

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman calls on Indian industry to invest boldly, expand capacities, and partner with government on workforce skilling initiatives.

"I hope there is no more hesitation for industry to invest further, expand capacities, produce more in India - Nirmala Sitharaman"

New Delhi, September 18

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday called upon Indian industry to shed any remaining hesitation in investing, expanding capacities, and boosting production, while also urging closer collaboration with the government on skilling the workforce.

Speaking at the Indian Foundation for Quality Management event in the capital, Sitharaman said industry should clearly spell out what more is required from the government to accelerate growth.

"I hope there is no more hesitation for industry to invest further, expand capacities, produce more in India, and what else is required by the government to do -- spell them out," she told business leaders.

Highlighting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's consistent reform push, Sitharaman said, "You have a prime minister in this country who you have known for decades, from his days as Chief Minister of Gujarat, and he's never relented on reforms."

The Finance Minister underscored the need for industry to play a greater role in addressing human resource gaps.

"Many graduates today are not adequately trained or groomed to meet the demands of large multinationals or Indian companies. Industry often spends six to eight months making new recruits job-ready. That preparation should already be part of what students learn before they apply for jobs," she said.

She laid out three key expectations from industry:

1. Investment push - to expand and scale up production in India.

2. Partnership in skilling - to ensure youth are employment-ready without long training gaps.

3. Continuous engagement with government - not just around the Union Budget but throughout the year.

Calling for academia, students, and business leaders to work in tandem, Sitharaman said quality management must become part of every sector. She praised the two-day symposium for bringing together diverse stakeholders, noting that such discussions help policymakers frame more effective initiatives.

The Minister also pointed out that recent Union Budgets have consistently allocated funds for skilling initiatives, not merely for training courses but through partnerships with institutions that have robust plans for workforce development.

"Skilling cannot begin and end with short-term courses; it has to be an ongoing effort," she added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The skilling partnership point is crucial. As someone working in HR, I see fresh graduates struggling with basic industry requirements. Colleges and companies need to collaborate better.
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Michael C
While the intent is good, industry needs more than just words. Clear policies, tax incentives, and easier compliance procedures would actually encourage investment. Hope the government delivers on these aspects too.
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Ananya R
Absolutely right about the skilling gap! My brother completed engineering but spent 6 months in company training. Our education system needs to be more industry-relevant. Good initiative by FM! 👍
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Vikram M
The continuous engagement point is key. Industry-government collaboration shouldn't be limited to budget season. Regular dialogues can solve many operational issues that businesses face daily.
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Sarah B
As an expat working in India, I've seen the potential here. Indian industry should definitely capitalize on the government's supportive stance. The talent pool is amazing, just needs proper direction and training.

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