"India has never been in a stronger position than today from a macro-economic perspective. The country is demonstrating an immense growth potential helped by a strong leadership at the helm, driving key policy changes," Parekh said at a risk summit organised by CII.
He noted that with the present government, large scale corruption has been weeded out.
He said India, with an expected GDP of above 7.5 per cent, stands out well in comparison to its global peers.
The veteran banker said the country has benefited tremendously from lower crude oil prices.
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He said the private sector capex has continued to be slow, so support has been boosted from public sector spending on infrastructure.
"Often when infrastructure projects are a work-in-progress, there tends to be a feeling that nothing is happening on the ground. But this is certainly not the case in India," he said.
Parekh said there is a flurry of activities taking place in the areas of ports and water ways, airports and smart cities.
"What the country needs at this juncture is to focus
on attracting much more long-term investors looking for higher yields in their investments," Parekh said.
Talking about risk management, he said it cannot be the sole responsibility of a company's board of directors.
"Risk management in an organisation cannot belong to an individual or a particular department or deemed to be the job of a compliance officer simply because it has to fit somewhere in an organisation," he said.
There has to be an orientation and culture of risk mitigation in every action of all employees.
"Risk management is always a collective responsibility, it cannot be an isolated activity," he said.
Parekh said an often asked question is whether India can decouple itself from global markets, and the answer is no.
"One can prepare and insulate oneself from the known risks, yet it is the unknown risks that remains a challenge," he said.
Parekh further said risk management systems will have to undergo unprecedented change as more organisation embrace digitisation.
He said one has to be cautious of the mixed signals coming global markets. On one hand, there is a tepid growth, continued problems with European banks, massive over-capacities in China, but on the other hand, key global stock markets have touched or are nearing all-time highs, the eminent banker added.
Parekh said in this present cycle, investors are chasing emerging markets predominately for yield. At the beginning of this year, investors had turned risk averse, causing havoc in emerging markets in January and February.
In the last week itself, equity funds have pumped in USD 5 billion in emerging markets, while over USD 20 billion has been invested in emerging market bonds.
He said emerging markets will be vulnerable, depending on how markets read the Fed Reserve expected course of action on interest rates.
"Any hint of raising interest rates in the US will result in massive capital outflows, once again resulting in unprecedented swings in currencies and stocks," he added.