| By
Ramesh Kumar and Praghakar Sinha
GONE IS the uncertainty over Finance Minister Manmohan Singh’s
resignation.
With Prime Minister Narasimha Rao rejecting it, the focus has now
shifted to how Singh can further uplift the party that backed him
to the hilt.
New questions are cropping up. What is the future of reforms? Will
he evince the same interest as he showed in the initial days of
liberalisation?
And
the final question: will the Manmohan Singh of 1994 be the same
as in the past?
Rails
industrialist Ramakrishna Bajaj : “ Why should his resignation
be forced? Why do you nurse doubts about his commitment to economic
reforms?
“With Rao pledging support to him by rallying the entire party
behind Singh, his conscience should be better now. He will go ahead
with his unfinished task with more vigour.”
It
was widely felt that the liberalisation programme currently underway
would receive a major setback if Singh were to leave the government.
Many
refused to believe Singh’s assertion that the real architect
of economic reforms was none other than Rao himself.
Not
that anyone doubted Rao’s commitment to economic reform. But
the plain truth is that it was Singh who gave shape to the new economic
order and ensured its implementation.
Says Delhi-based Indian Institute of Finance director J
D Aggarwal. “The Prime Minister has accepted the will of the
people by rejecting Singh’s resignation and it is no secret
that Narasimha Rao has full faith in Singh’s commitment to
carry out the economic reforms effectively.”
According
to Aggarwal, there wouldn’t be much of a long wait to test
Singh’s commitment to further reforms.
Adds
another economic analyst based in the capital, ”The general
budget is to be presented to the nation in February which should
prove to be an eye opener.”
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