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Referring to the 1991 balance of payments crisis, Reddy said, “The remarkable thing was that despite an unstable political situation, they managed a political consensus for whatever need to be taken to manage it successfully.” Speaking at the Hudson Institute, a top American think- tank, Reddy, who was the RBI governor from 2003 to 2008, said the world economic crisis of 2008 is still not over.
“In short term definitely things are better, but in mediumterm there is a question mark,” he said. “I think significant changes I see in the next 10 years in the geo-political situation. Now, in the process of globalisation of capital what has happened is many governments feel that their capacity in policy space to meet the expectations of the people is constrained by globalisation, he said.
“Now, we are searching for a new balance between global and national, state and market, new balance between finance and non-finance. That is the search that is going on,” he said, adding that in the next 10-15 years there would be a transformative demographic and technological shift over a fear of environmental issues. “So, these three will be the biggest challenge for global economy,” Reddy said.
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The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was enacted last year, paving the way for India to have a bankruptcy law that will ensure time-bound settlement of insolvencies, and enable faster turnaround of businesses, besides creating a database of serial defaulters.