"Unpredictability and volatility have become the new global norm. In these circumstances, it is extremely important for India to emerge and emerge out of the crisis even stronger," he said while addressing the Invest Karnataka 2016 summit here.
Jaitley said that India is "relatively unimpacted" by some of the factors that have caused the global crisis.
"Lower prices of oil and metal commodities substantially suit us. It indirectly impacts us because it shrinks our exports; it makes our markets more volatile, currency more volatile. But compared to the rest of the world, we are still on a much higher and stabler footing," he said.
The Indian economy is expected to grow between 7-7.5 per cent in the current fiscal. Last fiscal, it grew 7.2 per cent.
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"The world faces a very difficult and challenging situation... In the global situation, India is being distinctively noticed. It is being noticed for the reason, that even in the midst of global slowdown, India has comparatively stood out," he said.
He said that while looking back at 2001, 2008 and 2015 global crises, India can take some satisfaction in the fact that the country displayed a considerable amount of resilience during those times.
indefinitely at a double digit growth rate, Jaitley said China's "slowdown itself doesn't directly impact us, except for some indirect consequences.
"Under these circumstances when comparable economies are struggling we have an important and powerful opportunity in front of us in order to make sure that our own domestic economic systems are strengthened."
"In this strengthening we have been able to maintain a macroeconomic situation which is far more favourable than it had been in the past and this is what makes India the fastest growing economy in the world," the minister added.
The Finance Minister further said that merely organising investor meets will not get states the required investments.
"States which have a consistent track record of a stable administration, a good governance, clean administration, stable politics, stable policies, easy availability of land, natural resources, easier prospects of doing business... It is those states which will then become the primary destinations as far as the investments are concerned," he said.
Referring to cooperative federalism, he said governance is a shared responsibility of the Centre and the states, while the ultimate objective of the shared sovereignty is how "we empower people, how we make India grow faster and how we make sure that rates of poverty get depleted very fast".
"India is a case where the Centre and states have to compete with each other, then cooperate with each other, in order to make sure that the cooperative federalism brings out a model of economic governance in the country," he said.
"It is only when India grows faster that we are going to pull out a large number of people out of the poverty levels," he said.