A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, February 26, 2015
India aims to invest $137 billion in railways in next 5 years
(Reuters) - The government unveiled plans on Thursday to invest $137
billion in its decrepit rail network over the next five years, heralding
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's aggressive approach to building
infrastructure needed to unlock faster economic growth.
Over
the next year, India will increase investment by about a half to 1
trillion rupees ($16.15 billion) including funds raised by market
borrowing.
To meet the five year target, investment will have to speed up even more
after that, leaving economists questioning where the money would come
from as the government has to rein in its fiscal deficit.
Presenting the rail budget two days before the Union Budget - also
expected to hike infrastructure spending - Railway Minister Suresh
Prabhu shied away from hiking passenger fares to finance the upgrades,
but raised freight rates.
He said the budget "set the direction of a long and difficult road of reform."
Modi, who called the rail budget "a paradigm shift" is expected to use
Saturday's Union Budget to lay out an economic vision focused on
building the roads, power and technology needed to make India a leading
global economy.
Prabhu, one of Modi's trusted economic aides, said he would raise funds
from multi-lateral lenders, infrastructure and pension funds, as well as
"monetizing" railway assets. He said the railway would not be
privatized.
"Over the next five years, the railways have to undergo a transformation," Prabhu said in a speech that was short on details.
While India has the world's fourth largest rail network, it has been
outstripped by China, which now has more than six times as much track
following an intensive expansion and modernisation of its network over
the past two decades.
QUESTION OF FUNDING
Providing jobs for 1.3 million people, the railway is India's largest
single employer, and reform is politically sensitive. Successive
governments have shied away from modernization, preferring instead to
use the system to provide cheap transport and create jobs.
Economists welcomed the minister's decision to break with a populist
budget tradition of announcing dozens on new trains for politically
sensitive region, but said they would like to see more explanation of
how the investment will be funded.
"I am little doubtful about the ways the railway minister will finance
the huge capital expenditure as the budget lacks the specific detail,
said Jyotinder Kaur, principle economist at HDFC Bank, New Delhi.
The rail budget - a relic of Indian's British colonial past - said the
share of rail revenue available for investments would rise to 11.5
percent in the fiscal year starting on April 1, up from 8.2 percent in
the current fiscal year.
Excluding market borrowing, the amount projected for investment in
2015/16 is up by 31 percent, signaling an increased commitment to
infrastructure from federal funds.
State-run Indian Railways has more funds available thanks to a sharp
drop in the price of diesel fuel that powers most Indian locomotives.
The finance ministry increased central funding for the railway to 400
billion Indian rupees ($6.47 billion) from 301 billion Indian rupees
($4.87 billion) budgeted in 2014/15.
The BSE Sensex reacted
negatively to the speech, sinking 0.7 percent, with wagon makers
Titagarh Wagons down 2.6 percent, while Texmaco Rail & Engineering
lower 7 percent.
Passenger fares are subsidised by freight revenues that are high
compared to other countries. Prabhu raised rates further, with a 6.3
percent hike for coal transport. He said he planned to raise the amount
of freight carried to 1.5 billion tonnes a year, from 1 billion tonnes
at the moment.
The minister said spending would be focused on improving and expanding
existing railway lines, many of which are operating at more than full
capacity, with the average speed of the country's best trains a sluggish
70 km (44 miles) per hour.
Accidents are common and trains, platforms and toilets on the network are often filthy.
($1 = 61.9400 Indian rupees)
(Additional reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh and Aditya Kalra in New
Delhi and Abhishek Vishnoi in Mumbai; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel;
Editing by Douglas Busvine and Simon Cameron-Moore)