Business
Indias Aviation Sector Expands Rapidly As New Airports Open Every 50 Days: Civil Aviation Minister
Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh): India’s aviation sector is witnessing unprecedented growth, with the country opening a new airport every 50 days, Union Minister of Civil Aviation Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said on Friday. The minister was addressing the gathering at the Inaugural Session of the 30th CII Partnership Summit – 2025 held in Visakhapatnam.
Highlighting the pace and scale of expansion, the minister said the aviation sector has achieved remarkable success in building airports and enhancing passenger capacity.
“Every 50 days, we are opening a new airport, which is unprecedented anywhere in the globe, and that is the kind of success we have achieved in terms of building up of airports, the passenger capacity and many other verticals in aviation,” he said.
He added that Andhra Pradesh is emerging as a major beneficiary of the sector’s rapid growth, taking significant steps to strengthen its aviation and logistics ecosystem.
“Today, Andhra is taking it one step further, creating a logistics hub, creating an aviation hub,” he noted.
The minister shared that the state currently has seven airports and is planning to add seven more, marking a major expansion in regional air connectivity. Along with airports, Andhra Pradesh is also developing a strong aviation infrastructure to support training, maintenance, and manufacturing.
“We have four flight training organizations coming in the state. We have MRO ecosystem coming in Vishakhapatnam. We have aviation skilling, the university coming in Vishakhapatnam,” he said, emphasizing the integrated approach to create a full-fledged aviation ecosystem.
He further stated that the government is expanding the drone sector and building a “drone city” while also pushing aerospace and aircraft manufacturing in a big way across the country.
Speaking on India’s long-term vision, the minister said that the year 2047 should not be seen as a challenge but as a period filled with opportunities.
“2047 is not a challenge before the country, but it is an unlimited amount of opportunities that are there with us. And today, Andhra Pradesh is reaping out all the opportunities that are presented in front of us,” he said.
He attributed this progress to the strength of the “double-engined Sarkar,” where the state and central governments work together with unity, clarity, and conviction.
“When the state government and central government, with unity and clarity and conviction, they all come together, the strength that is shown is shown today in Andhra Pradesh,” he added.
Visakhapatnam is hosting the two-day CII Partnership Summit, a flagship event of the Andhra Pradesh Government, which officials say is poised to play a pivotal role in accelerating the state’s development.
The summit began on Friday, drawing more than 3,000 delegates from over 50 countries, including ministers, diplomats, global CEOs, industry leaders and representatives of major international organisations.
Business
Chancellor abandons planned income tax hike because of improved forecasts
The Chancellor has abandoned plans to hike income tax at the Budget because of improved economic forecasting.
Rachel Reeves had been expected to hike income tax in the face of a yawning gap in her spending plans, hinting as recently as Monday that the alternative would be “deep cuts” to public investment.
But reporting overnight claimed she has abandoned introducing an income tax rise at the November 26 Budget over fears it could anger both voters and backbench Labour MPs.
The PA news agency understands the strength of tax receipts has improved forecasting from the Office for Budget Responsibility, allowing for the U-turn.
This is particularly the case on stronger wage performance: the higher wages are, the more tax is paid on them.
A downgrade in productivity has also not been as bad as was first feared.
While Ms Reeves is no longer understood to be pursuing an income tax hike, tough choices are still said to lie ahead for the Government and other tax rises have not been ruled out.
Income tax thresholds could still be reduced while tax rates are kept the same, a move which could raise billions of pounds for the Treasury.
Limits to salary sacrifice schemes, as well as new measures to tax electric vehicles, are still in the mix as the Treasury pursues a “smorgasbord” approach of raising a range of smaller taxes.
The Chancellor has not changed her approach, it is understood, and still intends to give herself larger fiscal headroom – the buffer against economic headwinds which could impact Government spending plans.
The latest Budget measures were submitted last week, rather than being a knee-jerk response to the turmoil in No 10 this week sparked by a briefing war.
Ms Reeves has been laying the ground for tax rises over recent weeks, including during an early-morning speech on November 4 aimed at preparing the public for the Budget.
Downing Street insisted that the thrust of the speech “stands”.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “She was very clear about the challenges the country faces and her priorities in addressing those challenges.
“All of that still stands.”
The spokesman refused to comment on Budget speculation, but said the Chancellor will aim to “build more resilient public finances with the headroom to withstand global turbulence”.
This would “give businesses the confidence to invest and leaving the Government freer to act when the situation calls for it”, he added.
Government borrowing costs rose in the wake of the apparent U-turn on income tax on Friday morning.
Speculation about the change in direction sparked a sell-off in UK Government bonds, also known as gilts: the means by which the Government borrows money from private investors.
The gilt market later stabilised somewhat as the reasoning behind the Treasury’s decision-making became apparent.
Among those who welcomed suggestions the tax rise had been abandoned was Health Secretary Wes Streeting.
He told PA: “What I would say about this morning is, it is really important that we keep the promises that we made to the public at the last general election.
“Our economy was broken by the Conservatives, so were our public services, but so was trust in politics itself.
“Our job is to rebuild the economy, rebuild our public services, and rebuild trust in politics.”
Helen Miller, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank, said it was “not unusual” for chancellors to make last-minute changes to their Budget plans.
She added: “But the news that Rachel Reeves has backed away from a plan to increase the rates of income tax will lead investors to worry that the Chancellor will instead increase a range of smaller taxes that can be more damaging to economic growth.
“They may also worry that the change of plans signals that this Government are reluctant to do politically difficult things.
“These are the kinds of concerns that can lead investors to demand higher returns when lending to the Government.”
If the Government does choose to raise a set of smaller taxes, they should also be reformed “so that they do less damage to growth”, the IFS chief said.
Business
GST cut drives MSME loan demand – The Times of India
CHENNAI/MUMBAI: The GST rate cut is driving MSMEs to seek additional funding from banks for expansion. After the GST rejig, banks have seen a spike in enquiries for advances from the MSMEs. It comes amid lenders having moved closer to their annual targets for the MSME segment in the first half of the current fiscal. For instance, state-owned Indian Overseas Bank has recorded its MSME portfolio touching Rs 48,000 crore as of Sept 30, 2025, out of the total target of Rs 51,000 crore for the full financial year, a 16.7% increase YoY.
Indian Overseas Bank’s MD & CEO Ajay Kumar Srivastava said govt has taken several initiatives to accelerate MSME growth, such as their classification and turnover. Noting that the bank is likely to reach Rs 55,000 crore in its MSME portfolio this fiscal, he said, GST will be one of the major factors. “We are focusing on the manufacturing (in the MSME) sector,” he added.To target the high-growth MSME segment, the country’s largest lender SBI has launched digital MSME loans. These loans offer MSMEs end-to-end sanctions in 45 minutes. The bank has processed nearly 2.3 lakh such accounts with credit limits of Rs 74,434 crore up to Aug 2025. Indian Bank MD & CEO Binod Kumar said, there has been good traction from the MSMEs, with the YoY growth tripled from 5-6% to around 17% (FY25 vs FY26). “We are seeing demand mainly from the services sector, including hospitality. It is for their expansion plans or setting up new hotels both during pre- and post-GST 2.0. Major demand is also coming from the ancillary units. We will exceed our target for MSMEs this year,” he said. PNB has launched a slew of products, including comprehensive financing up to Rs 100 crore, digital MSME loans enable paperless lending up to Rs 25 lakh. The bank has also introduced a fully digital MSME loan of up to Rs 5 crore backed by CGTMSE guarantee and concessional rates.Bankers said that another reason for the thrust on MSME loans is that the new regulations on expected credit loss make it less capital intensive for banks to lend to MSMEs.
Business
Sensex gains for 4th day, Rupee rises against dollar – The Times of India
MUMBAI: The sensex and Nifty sustained their positive momentum for the fourth consecutive day and settled with modest gains on Friday, aided by a buying rush in FMCG, banking and telecom sector shares. The sensex ended 84 points higher at 84,563, while Nifty went up 31 points to settle at 25,910. Both indices were off to weak starts when trading began. Meanwhile, the rupee rose 4 paise to close at 88.66 against the dollar. However, strength of the American currency and rising crude oil prices prevented sharper gains in the local unit, forex traders said. Brent crude was trading 1.6% higher at $64 per barrel in futures trade. agencies
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