Farmers in rural Bengal were finding it difficult to sell their paddy and other agricultural produce as the "price they are getting is uneconomic", he told a rally at the conclusion of the four-day state conference of the CITU.
No new industry was coming up and those which had promised to invest in the state during Left rule were departing.
"The government failed to attract a single fresh investment. IT majors Wipro and Infosys, who came here during our rule, are now thinking of leaving the state. What will happen to the state?" Bhattacharjee wondered.
He said no new investment would come up, if the state government failed to provide land to the investors.
Singur, where the TMC led a violent agitation, now lay barren, quite contrary to promises of new industry made by the TMC, he pointed out.
"Hooghly's profile would have been different by now, if their plan to bring industry to Singur was not thwarted."
He said at a time when salaries of ministers in the TMC-led government had gone up from Rs 7,000 during Left rule to Rs 27,000 now, ex-transport workers were not getting their legitimate pension, and many of them were committing suicides. MORE