India has been one of the fastest-growing large economies in the world, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said, asserting that the country has carried out several key reforms in the last five years, but more needs to be done.
Responding to a question on India's economic development in the last five years at a fortnightly news conference in Washington on Thursday, IMF communications director Gerry Rice said, "India has, of course, been one of the world's fastest-growing large economies of late, with growth averaging about seven per cent over the past five years."
"Important reforms have been implemented, and we feel more reforms are needed to sustain this high growth, including need to harness the demographic dividend opportunity, which India has," he said.
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Details about the Indian economy would be revealed in the upcoming World Economic Outlook (WEO) survey report to be released by the IMF ahead of the annual spring meeting with the World Bank next month, he said. This report would be the first under Indian-American economist Gita Gopinath, who is now IMF's chief economist.
"The WEO will go into more details. But among the policy priorities, we would include are accelerating the clean-up of banks and corporate balance sheets; continuing fiscal consolidation, both at centre and state levels; broadly maintaining the reform momentum in terms of structural reforms in factor markets, labour and land reforms and further enhancing the business climate to achieve faster and more inclusive growth," Rice said.
-PTI