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Tuesday, 17 March 2015 00:38 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
The IMF, in its latest forecast last week, said it expected Asia’s third-largest economy to grow by 7.5% in the 2015/16 fiscal year starting on 1 April, below the government’s own forecast.
A pact between the government and the Reserve Bank of India to formalise inflation targeting “should provide a robust institutional foundation for maintaining price stability”, Lagarde said in a speech to women students.
But to anchor long-term growth and employ a workforce that will grow to become the world’s largest by 2030, India needs to open up its labour market to women, boost financial inclusion and invest even more in infrastructure, she said.
Lagarde cited a new IMF working paper which found that only 33% of women in India worked – below the global average of 50% and the average in East Asia of 63%. Not only is female participation in the labour force low, but it has been declining since 2005. Lagarde called this a ‘huge missed opportunity’ and called for urgent remedies.