India's economic growth remained subdued at 4.7 per cent in 2013-14 and at 4.6 per cent in the fourth quarter of the financial year, mainly due to a decline in manufacturing and mining output.
"As expected, manufacturing growth continues to disappoint. The trend needs to be reversed and the policy direction must aim at boosting manufacturing growth as an imperative for job creation. Constraints on procedural and regulatory sides must be reviewed to promote the spirit of enterprise," Ficci President Sidharth Birla said.
"Announcements made by the Prime Minister and his Cabinet Ministers over the last few days leave us with an encouraging outlook, as the governmental actions will definitely have a positive impact on the investment sentiment," Birla said.
CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee hoped that going forward, investments would pick up as the de-clogging of the project pipeline would help revive demand in the economy.
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Moreover, the ushering in of a stable government post elections has revived sentiments and lifted investor confidence which would pave the way for growth, he said.
"The sub-five per cent GDP expansion poses a big challenge for the new government which needs to act really fast to revive the economic cycle".
"The good thing is that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his team are aware of this challenge and appear to be going around the business of governance and policy issues, Assocham President Rana Kapoor said.
Commenting on the fiscal deficit data, Banerjee said it is a major positive which would restore investor confidence and enhance India's image as a stable destination for doing business.
"If fiscal deficit remains high, it will wean away investors as they are anticipating an improved fiscal position. Therefore, government should focus on reducing the subsidy burden and identifying the actual beneficiaries with defined deliverables and outcomes," Jaipuria said.