Yashwant Sinha, former finance minister and senior BJP leader, had slammed Arun Jaitley for the mess in the economy. (Source: Express photo by Prem Nath Pandey) Yashwant Sinha, former finance minister and senior BJP leader, had slammed Arun Jaitley for the mess in the economy. (Source: Express photo by Prem Nath Pandey)

Shortly after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, without taking names, described him as a “job applicant@80”, senior BJP leader and former Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha responded on Thursday saying “if I was a job applicant, he (Jaitley) would not be there in the first place”. Jaitley took a swipe at Sinha over his opinion piece, published in The Indian Express Wednesday, in which he blamed the minister for the “mess” in the economy. Sinha wrote that the economy is in a downward spiral, its revival unlikely by the 2019 elections and a “hard landing appears inevitable.” He claimed that his views were shared by many people in the party who were “not speaking up out of fear”.

In an interview to The Indian Express, Sinha maintained that the government “completely misread” the situation on the economic front and “kept chipping away at the margins”. He said that instead of acknowledging “there was a problem”, “they kept singing praises of themselves, patting their backs”.

Sinha said many BJP MPs had told him that “no one was being allowed to speak or raise issues at meetings of the parliamentary party”. He also slammed what he felt were efforts by the government to pit his son Jayant Sinha, Minister of State for Civil Aviation, against him on the issue of the handling of the economy.

Also read| They didn’t admit that there is a problem, they kept singing their own praises: Yashwant Sinha

“For all those who are saying that mine was a personal attack, it is not. If it is the economy, the blame has to be on the Finance Minister and not the Home Minister. By pitting my son Jayant against me, they are trying to obfuscate issues. I can also get personal but I don’t want to fall into that trap,” he said.

In what appeared to be a counter to his views, Jayant Sinha, writing in The Times of India Thursday, said: “Several articles have been written recently on the challenges facing the Indian economy. Unfortunately, these articles draw sweeping conclusions from a narrow set of facts, and quite simply miss the fundamental structural reforms that are transforming the economy… These structural reforms are not just desirable, they are necessary to create a ‘New India’ and provide good jobs for our billion-strong workforce”.

Also read | Arun Jaitley slams Yashwant Sinha: India at 70, PM Modi at 3.5, job applicant at 80

Yashwant Sinha said he does not see the prospect of a change of guard in the Finance Ministry because “reshuffles have taken place and that has not happened. The point is we have lost precious time and now very little time is left and a new finance minister will not be able to do much”.

“If it is a question of national interest, all other interests become insignificant. And if there is collateral damage (to his son’s political career), so be it “ he said, adding that he did not discuss any of these issues with Jayant. On his son’s article in defence of the government, he said: “It’s not a father-son issue or a family issue. It should not be debased into a family issue and I condemn it.’’

Yashwant Sinha writes: The economy is on a downward spiral, I need to speak up now

He said he had kept quiet for too long. “I waited for a long time and 2014 is not 2017, and with the growth rate on a decline in six quarters and forty months down the line, you cannot hide your performance.’’

He said he finally decided to raise the issue of economic management because it was clear to him that there was lack of application of mind to the task at hand. “They should have admitted that there was a problem, but instead, month after month they kept singing praises of themselves, patting their backs and not attending to the problems which accumulated over time.’’

Also read| Arun Jaitley on Yashwant Sinha: Don’t have the luxury of being a former finance minister

He said the government “completely misread the situation” on the economic front and “kept chipping away at the margins. So, year after year, the bad loans of banks or NPAs kept rising. The first step was to stop the growth of bank NPAs which they did not do”. The government, he said, also neglected the telecom sector.

He said with only one regular Budget before the 2019 elections, it would be difficult for the government to show results. The constitution of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, he said, had come belatedly and it would not be able to deliver given the limited time.

📣 The Indian Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@indianexpress) and stay updated with the latest headlines

For all the latest India News, download Indian Express App.