Inclusive growth augurs well for the long term
28 Feb 2007
The overall focus of union budget 2007 on faster and more inclusive growth with a spotlight on rural development augurs well for the long term economic development of the country. This is a progressive and balanced budget from the economic perspective, said Jangoo Dalal, president and country manager of Cisco India & SAARC.
Prime minister Manmohan Singh said: "We need faster growth because, at our level of incomes, there can be no doubt that we must expand the production base of the economy if we want to provide broad-based improvement in the material conditions of living of our population, ..........But growth alone is not enough if it does not produce a flow of benefits that is sufficiently wide-spread. We, therefore, need a growth process that is much more inclusive, .......... and which also ensures access to essential services such as health and education for all sections of the community."
The government is also committed to e-governance, having increased the allocation both at the central and state levels, with a new scheme for manpower development in the software export industry. Computerisation programmes for the public distribution system and the Food Corporation of India will also enhance efficiency and benefit the common man, Dalal said.
The proposal to grant pass-through status to venture capital funds for undertakings in IT, biotech and other emerging sectors, and the service tax exemption for technology business services provided by technology business incubators and eligible incubatees will further encourage innovation and IP creation in India.
Significantly increased allocation to both primary and secondary education and innovative financing for infrastructure projects are positives and are imperative to sustaining growth in excess of nine per cent, Dalal said.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The Petro-Tech Pivot: Why Your Next Phone Is Built on Shifting Sands
By Cygnus | 12 Mar 2026
Rising crude prices are reshaping electronics manufacturing as petrochemical costs drive pressure across the global tech supply chain.
Hardened compute: The rise of the data bunker
By Axel Miller | 11 Mar 2026
Explore how AI demand and geopolitical risk are driving investment in fortified data centers worldwide.
The GitHub insurgency: Open-source AI vs. the state
By Cygnus | 11 Mar 2026
How OpenClaw is reshaping debates around AI governance, decentralization and state oversight in 2026.
The 35-minute revolution: How China’s electric trucks outpaced the West
By Cygnus | 10 Mar 2026
Chinese electric trucks from BYD and Windrose are entering Europe with faster charging and lower costs. Here’s how legacy manufacturers are responding.
The new Silk Road is a fiber-optic cable: The rise of digital fortresses
By Axel Miller | 10 Mar 2026
As geopolitical tensions reshape technology, countries are building sovereign clouds and fortified data centers. Explore the rise of digital fortresses in 2026.
The silicon boardroom: Why 2026 is the year of the agentic reality check
By Cygnus | 10 Mar 2026
Companies in 2026 are redesigning workflows around autonomous AI agents. Explore the governance risks, workforce shift and future of enterprise automation.
Shifting terminals: Why global travelers are rethinking trips to the United States
By Cygnus | 09 Mar 2026
Global travel patterns are shifting as costs rise, visa delays persist and competition grows. Here’s why many travelers are rethinking trips to the United States in 2026.
Safety over scale: The Middle East conflict forces a pause in Indian tech expansion
By Axel Miller | 05 Mar 2026
Autonomous vehicle firms pause Abu Dhabi and Dubai operations amid Middle East conflict. Will Indian tech projects pivot to GIFT City and Bangalore?
The energy island: Why Big Tech is building its own power systems for the AI era
By Cygnus | 04 Mar 2026
AI data centers are reshaping the energy market as companies like Amazon, Microsoft and Google invest in dedicated power generation to support massive computing deman


