INSIDE THIS ISSUE
   
   
   
  01 MAIN
   
   
  02 TRADE & ECONOMY
   
   
  03 INVESTMENT UPDATE
   
   
  04 NEWSMAKERS
   
   
  05 INFOTECH
   
   
  06 CULTURE
   
   
  07 TRAVEL
   
   
  08 CALENDAR
   

   
  HIGHLIGHTS
   
  Economy to grow by 7% in '05-06
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  Culture: Partying in Mumbai
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  Travel:
Spa India

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  Indian Independence Day Celebrations

The 58th anniversary of Indian Independence Day was celebrated at the High Commission of India in Canberra and Consulate General of India in Sydney on 15 August 2005 with flag hoisting ceremony followed by reading of President’s message and rendition of patriotic songs by members of the local Indian Community. A large number of Indian and Australians of Indian origin attended the ceremonies.


The India Australia Association of Canberra (IAAC) organized a function on 14 August at the High Commission premises to celebrate the occasion. A Friendship Fair was also organized in Canberra by the Mandir Society of Australia and Diwali Mela Inc. of Canberra on 27 August. The Fair was inaugurated by Mr. Vijay Kumar, Secretary (Coordination), Ministry of External Affairs. In Sydney, the Second Annual Independence Day Address of the Australia India Business Council was delivered by Mr. Bruce Billson, Parliamentary Secretary for Foreign and Multicultural Affairs. The Independence Day was also celebrated by Indian Associations in different parts of Australia.

 

     
  ‘Outcome Budget’ Highlights  
   
 
     
  The Finance Minister of India Mr. P. Chidambaram tabled in parliament India's first ‘Outcome Budget’ that measures the country's development programmes in terms of actual outcomes, as opposed to mere fiscal outlays. The 725-page document is the culmination of Mr. Chidambaram's promise in the budget speech Feb 28 to evolve a mechanism with the Planning Commission to assess development outcomes of all major schemes.

The Outcome Budget would be a pre-expenditure instrument to help realise the ministries' vision through clearly defined outcomes as a supplement to current systems built around post-expenditure scrutiny,' he told the Lok Sabha.

 
   
 
 
  'It will further strengthen a citizen's right to information by putting critical data and information on expected outcomes in the public domain, public scrutiny, which will help ensure value for money,' he said.
The Finance Minister said he would make the outcome budget an annual exercise, adding that it would also include non-plan expenditure in the next fiscal, as against covering just plan expenditure in the current year.
Speaking to reporters after tabling the document, Mr. Chidambaram said the government would also table a performance budget at the end of the fiscal to indicate the extent of physical targets achieved.
The general budget, outcome budget and the performance budget should together give a much better picture of what has been physically achieved based on the fiscal outlays made every year, he said, and hoped the exercise would become broad-based. 'I sincerely hope some states begin the outcome budget this year and the rest would follow next year.'

  Benchmarking standards:

Some of the important steps outlined in the outcome budget to convert fiscal outlays into physical outcomes include specific definition of programmes into measurable terms and benchmarking the standards and quality of the schemes. It would also help ensure the right flow of money at the right time and prevent the practice in the system to park funds. Besides, crucial decisions can be taken more effectively to target limited funds into proper schemes.

Education


The outcome budget points out that the 'Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan' programme to enroll all children of between six and 14 years of age in elementary schools, faces the problem of proper updating of village education registers.Difficulties are also being faced in enrolling teachers, while those on the rolls resort to absenteeism. This, the budget says, not only hinders improved access,
  but also the retention of children under the programme. This apart, the outcome budget says, the popular mid-day meal scheme to primary school children - that seeks to improve nourishment and provide an incentive to get educated - suffers from the lack of supervision and management.

Infrastructure

Other projects where it has expressed caution include the accelerated irrigation programme, renovation of water bodies and cost overruns, and the poor allocation of resources for the infrastructure needed to host the 2010 Commonwealth Games. The industry welcomed the tabling of the first outcome budget saying it provides an indication of the projects, which would be implemented during the current fiscal. 'Now the Outcome Budget has clearly said the north-south and east-west Highways will be completed by the end of 2006-07 and golden quadrilateral highway during 2005-06 itself,' he added.
           
     
  Visit of CII Delegation  
     
 
 
A delegation from the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), led by its President Mr. Y. C. Deveshwar visited Australia from 14-18 August, 2005. at the invitation of the Australian Industry Group (AIG). The delegation included Dr. Jamshed J. Irani, Chairman of India Australia Council and Director of Tata Sons; Mr. K. M. Mammen, CMD, MRF tyres; Mr. Arun Kumar Jagatramka, Chairman Gujarat NRE Australia Pty. Ltd., among others.

The CII delegation participated in the Australian Industry Group Annual National Forum 2005 in Canberra. Mr. Deveshwar addressed the Forum on ‘Rethinking world industry – India, a good fit’.

The delegation had useful interaction with Australian political, business and industry leaders. The delegation called on Minister for Foreign Affairs of Australia, and Deputy Premiers of New South Wales and Victoria. In Sydney, AIG and CII participated in a seminar with the Australia India Business Council (AIBC). A joint meeting of the India Australia Council and Australia India Council was also held. In Melbourne, the delegation also had a useful meeting with the Asia Society.

The visit of the CII delegation followed an earlier visit of CII sports infrastructure delegation in July, and was a manifestation of the growing links between Indian and Australian business and industry.