"I think the people of India want growth. They also want distributive justice.... We should not have lifted the foot that have been kept on the accelerator of growth. We should have pressed on with growth, pressed on with reforms even while we were continuing our flagship programmes.
"Somewhere I think we thought that lower growth would be acceptable...(but) people of India want high growth, then want distributive justice," he said in an interview to Karan Thapar in Headlines Today programme 'To The Point'.
He claimed the UPA's 10-year rule was the "golden period" of growth.
India's economic growth, however, slowed to decade's low of 4.5 per cent in 2012-13. The estimate growth rate in the last fiscal is 4.9 per cent.
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When asked if 4.9 per cent was achievable in view of the low growth recorded in different quarters, the Finance Minister said: "As of now, our assessment is that it is attainable".
Chidambaram claimed his record of marksmanship is much better than other past Finance Ministers'.
Replying questions on gold, he said though demand for some relaxation in import duty is justified
He, however added that 10 per cent import duty on gold is not high.
Large gold imports were a major reason for record high current account deficit of USD 88 billion in 2012-13. Due to curb on gold imports, the CAD fell to USD 32 billion in 2013-14.
As regards fiscal deficit, Chidambaram exuded the confidence that it would be contained at 4.6 per cent of the GDP in 2013-14.