"The Indian economy needs a couple of big things, better governance, a stronger state delivering security of contract, protecting property rights, providing infrastructure," Subramanian said in a podcast interview to IMF.
"You need a bigger role for the private sector, means getting rid of the lots of regulations that stifled the private sector, that stifled employment creation, that stifled the ability of the private sector to grow, to become big. These are the kind of broad twin challenges that India faces," said the former IMF economist, who was appointed Chief Economic Advisor in the Finance Ministry on October 16.
Responding to a question, Subramanian said "a lot of projects are stalled, because there is not enough power, there is not enough coal, or the companies are over indebted."
"So clearing these bottlenecks is going to be the biggest kick start to private investment and growth," he said.
Bureaucrats were not taking some crucial decisions fearing that they would be sued in courts, he said.
"So I think, just creating the conditions for more expeditious decision making and then you need to get the infrastructure going again, making power and coal and addressing those would be a big priority," he said.
Subramanian said a five per cent growth rate is "remotely not enough" for India to grow and provide the jobs for the expanding labour force.
"Growth would have to be brought back to seven-and-a-half and eight per cent consistently for about 10, 15, 20 years, if India is to really address all these challenges," he said.
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