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Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram addresses a press conference in New Delhi, on July 31, 2013/AFP

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India says can afford food-for-poor scheme as rupee falls

Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram addresses a press conference in New Delhi, on July 31, 2013/AFP

Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram addresses a press conference in New Delhi, on July 31, 2013/AFP

NEW DELHI August 27- India’s finance minister insisted on Tuesday that the government can afford a vast new food programme for the poor despite concern about its impact on the strained public finances.

The rupee skidded in morning trade to 65.40 against the dollar, close to its lifetime low of 65.56, and stock markets fell the morning after the lower house of parliament passed the Food Security Bill.

The legislation, a flagship programme of the ruling Congress party with a budgeted annual cost of around $18 billion, is intended to “wipe out” endemic hunger and malnutrition in the aspiring superpower.

Once passed by the upper house and approved by the president, it will reform India’s existing food distribution system, providing five kilograms of heavily subsidised food grain per month to more than 800 million people.

“After providing for the food security bill, we will remain within the limit I have set for myself in the budget,” Finance Minister P. Chidambaram told reporters at a press conference in the capital.

The government has budgeted an additional 230 billion rupees annually for the programme on top of the existing 900-billion-rupee food subsidy bill.

Chidambaram, who has been seeking to reassure investors about India’s finances, reiterated that a budget deficit of 4.8 percent of gross domestic product remained a “red line” that would not be crossed this year.

India’s central Reserve Bank of India has previously warned that increased public spending stemming from the food bill could deepen the government’s deficit and stoke already elevated inflation.

“The broad sentiment for the rupee is still weak. The food bill will be a strain on the government finances,” said Siddhartha Sanyal, chief India economist with Barclays Capital.

Asian shares and currencies were also hit on Tuesday by concerns over possible US military intervention in Syria.

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The rupee, one of Asia’s worst performing currencies this year, has fallen on fears of foreign fund outflows as the US economy picks up.

Chidambaram said on Monday that he expected the bill to clear the upper house of parliament “in the next couple of days”. It will then need to be signed by the president to pass into law.

Congress party chief Sonia Gandhi told MPs in parliament that the food bill would send a “big message” to the world that India “is taking the responsibility of providing food security of all its citizens.”

Gandhi was later taken to hospital before voting took place but was discharged hours later after a check up. She had reportedly been suffering from a fever and was exhausted, a party MP said.

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