"At a time of global uncertainty, budgets can be challenging to implement but the Finance Minister has done an admirable job in creating a vision that will propel the domestic economy while remaining cognizant about foreign investors," US-India Business Council (USIBC) president Mukesh Aghi said.
According to the USIBC, the budget is a fiscally sound agenda that doubles down on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's stated goals of improving the ease of doing business by reducing red tape, investing in "Skill India", and attempts to mitigate the "negative impact" of demonetisation.
The budget deepens the government's move towards a digital economy, while remaining committed to attracting foreign investment, increasing infrastructure spending in roads and civil aviation, rationalising the tax structure, spurring domestic growth while also bringing in rural India into the fold of the digital economy, the USIBC said.
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As India's Goods and Services Tax (GST) is efficiently and effectively implemented, India will begin a sustained economic expansion, creating jobs and unprecedented opportunity, Somers said.
Noting that the budget's relevance as a core policymaking tool is greatly reduced from the early 1990's, Rick Rossow, from Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said as such there are fewer groundbreaking reforms triggered by the budget itself.
"A few sectors were prioritised through new or expanded spending measures, such as agriculture. The one significant, relatively new step was the announcement of curbs on political contributions. This is a welcome step that will add transparency to an opaque process," he said.
Karun Rishi, President of USA-India Chamber of Commerce (USAIC) described it as a well-balanced, fiscally prudent budget in the right direction.