Speaking at the Times Litfest here, Ramesh said a lot of "small things" have still been left undone post the 1991 economic reforms, and to accomplish them there needs to be communication among various parties.
"Economics of economic reform was known, but the politics of it was the one that drove the economic reform (of 1991). I am glad that finally a tea party was held day before yesterday and may be that is a part of political management which is very important for selling ideas," he said.
Ramesh said: "There are issues which are very fundamentally related to the future of Indian economy on which there is no political consensus and I think political consensus is absolutely essential. I am hoping that the GST, it would create a trajectory for building the consensus on issues."
In some cases it takes up to a decade for consensus to emerge among political parties in India, he said, adding that the consensus on economic reform emerges after discussions within the Indian democratic process.
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"The key lesson of 1991, which has resonance even for today, is political management... Of the utmost importance. And by political management I mean political outreach, political communication, political manoeuvring, that's the key," Ramesh said.
that of India, Ramesh said they started reforms process 14 years earlier than India and focused more on foreign trade.
"Today, China is the world's largest exporter. Now, when I say trade, I don't mean only exports, China is also the world's biggest importer.
"Now, India wants to be a big player in the world but we want to be the world's biggest exporter and smallest importer, that doesn't square up. That's where the Chinese have been pragmatic," he said.
Talking about reforms, Ramesh said "1991 was god of big things, it is the small things that have (been) left undone. That requires minute attention to details, that requires trade-off among competing interest groups, that requires listening to various people and explaining what (it) is all about.
Asked if the 1991 reforms would have sailed through if Rajiv Gandhi was the Prime Minister then, Ramesh said, "I believe circumstances drive events. Circumstances in India was placed in 1991 such that whoever was the Prime Minister, the broad direction would have been what was unleashed."
Batting for a democratic system to achieve inclusive growth, he said, "The answer to problems in our democratic system is to fix our democratic system and not think as authoritarianism, soft or hard, is necessarily a good answer for us."
"These are issues where there is wide diversity in opinion and those are issues which need to be discussed. It needs to be discussed in political forum, in Parliament, in civil society, and over a period of time a consensus will emerge," Ramesh said.