President Pranab Mukherjee has posed this question in his just released autobiography.
He has answered the question himself by stating that his meetings with industrialists, individually or collectively, were very important.
This, the President said, is what he had followed during his tenure as Finance Minister and Commerce Minister unlike V P Singh who was "adamant" about not having any one-on-one meetings with industrialists.
Mentioning about the period between 1998 and 1991, which was marked by social and political turmoil in the country, Mukherjee cited differences in approach between him and V P Singh, who was appointed as Finance Minister under the Rajiv Gandhi government.
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"In other words, how can a Finance Minister or Prime Minister not meet industrialists?," the President asked in the memoir--"The Turbulent Years- 1980-1996".
On much talked about differences between Manmohan Singh and him, Mukherjee said he had no role in Singh's exit as RBI Governor. He, however, said the differences between him and central bank head were nothing more than legitimate exchanges of opinion over professional matters.
"Let me add that, contrary to conjecture in some quarters, I had absolutely no role in Dr Manmohan Singh's departure from the RBI," the President said.
Mukherjee said the relationship between the Finance Minister and the Governor of RBI is complex and it is impossible that they be of one mind on all issues.
Mukherjee held the post of Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission, from June 1991 to May 1996, the entire period of P V Narasimha Rao's tenure as Prime Minister.
PV's biggest achievement was spearheading the economic reforms of 1991. These reforms put our country on a high growth trajectory and helped towards achieving our true economic potential. The economic reforms programme unlocked India's entrepreneurial potential across various sectors of the economy, Mukherjee said.
In the financial sector, measures were implemented to bring capital adequacy and prudent norms for asset classification in banks, the licensing of new private banks, the gradual decontrol of foreign exchange, currency convertibility, privatisation and disinvestment. Foreign investment norms and external trade were liberalised.
The President mentioned how he worked out a new "Gadgil-Mukherjee formula", by working with Deputy Chairman of Planning Commission D R Gadgil, for non-special category states.
"The uniqueness of the Gadgil-Mukherjee formula was the inclusion, for the first time, of a performance criterion for the allocation of central resources in plans.
"This formula prevailed from 1991 till the establishment of the Niti Aayog--with Arvind Panagriya as Vice Chairman--which replaced the Planning Commission," he said.