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UPA Left a ‘Terrible Legacy’, PM Modi Wants to Fix It: Jaitley

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley was responding to former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s speech in Rajya Sabha.

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India
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Rejecting former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's criticism of demonetisation, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Friday said the NDA government is trying to transform the previous regime of "loot and plunder" into a more "honest system".

We are trying to transform India’s economy where there is a premium on honesty... We switched over from a system which promotes it (corruption, dubious political funding, bribery) into a more ethical system which the developing economies in the world has followed.
Arun Jaitley told Times Now

He regretted that the Congress-led UPA government did not find the 2G spectrum auction, coal auction and the CWG scam, the crony capitalism at its worst as "organised loot and plunder".

The transformation into a more honest system is being called loot and the kind of regime that we saw between 2004-14 is being called the Indian normal. This hypothesis I completely reject.
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Responding to the opposition’s demand that the PM should be present in Parliament, he said:

Opposition is entitled to demand the PM’s presence. And we have agreed to that. Now if the debate goes on for 15 hours, you can’t expect the PM to be present the whole time leaving behind his engagements. As far as Rahul Gandhi is concerned, I want to tell him to check his own record.

Speaking in the Rajya Sabha on Thursday, Singh had termed the implementation of demonetisation as a "monumental management failure" and a case of "organised loot and legalised plunder" and would lead to 2 per cent decline in GDP.

Taking a dig at the government's contention that demonetisation would benefit in the long run, the former prime minister recalled a famous quote by economist J M Keynes that "in the long run, we are all dead".

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Jaitley retorted by saying:

Yes, of course, we will all be dead, but when we get an opportunity to be in government, are we only to think about our own generation? The country will live on even when we are all dead. Therefore, what is the legacy for that country which we are going to leave behind?

He took on the previous UPA government, saying that between 2004-14, it did not want to take any decision and therefore left a "terrible legacy" behind.

But the present Prime Minister doesn’t want to leave behind a legacy of ‘do-nothing’ approach or a policy paralysis.

(With inputs from PTI)

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