Breaking his silence on the state of economy and the rapid slide in the rupee value, he made an elaborate statement in Parliament ruling out rollback of reforms and bringing in capital controls while appealing for a political consensus to put the economy back on path of high growth.
However, his efforts to weave a consensus did not meet with any success after he and the BJP got into a slug-fest over who was responsible for the current situation.
Responding to Leader of the Opposition Arun Jaitley, who talked about investors having lost confidence in the country, Singh told Rajya Sabha that he would be the last person to deny certain events and happenings in India which were a source of concern to domestic and foreign investors.
"What are those conditions. Parliament is the supreme body in our country. If Parliament is not allowed to function session after session," he said to strong rebuttals from the BJP benches.
The sudden dip in the exchange rate is "certainly a shock" but the government would address it through other measures and not through capital controls or reversing economic reforms.
