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Modi UPDATE 2-India diluted bill lands, earn lower house vote

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Modi UPDATE 2-India diluted bill lands, earn lower house vote-India’s government rallied its allies on Tuesday behind a land reform bill, setting the stage for a vote in the upper house of parliament that will test Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ability to pursue his business-friendly agenda.

Amendments introduced by Modi’s party to soften the impact of the reforms ensured the backing of most of his coalition partners and victory in a lower house vote. But they failed to placate opposition parties, who stormed out of the chamber.

Modi, 64, wants to overhaul a land acquisition act passed by the last government which, his backers say, has tied up billions of dollars in infrastructure and industry investments in red tape.

Yet although his nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won a sweeping mandate in last May’s general election, it lacks the votes in the upper house to put those changes permanently on to the statute book.

Modi issued an executive order in December to exempt projects in defence, rural electrification, rural housing and industrial corridors from provisions of the 2013 law requiring 80 percent of affected landowners to agree to a deal.

He also scrapped the need for companies to conduct a social impact study for such projects, a process requiring public hearings that can drag on for years.

Failure to pass the law in both houses would lead the executive order, or ordinance, to lapse when the current session of parliament ends. That in turn could open the way for Modi to convene a rare joint session of parliament, where his coalition would have a majority on paper, to pass the land law.

Strategists from Modi’s BJP say the joint session route is viable but caution that it could cause political friction to escalate both inside and outside parliament.

Among the changes agreed by the BJP and its allies in India’s ruling coalition, the National Democratic Alliance, were limiting the breadth of an industrial corridor to 1 kilometre on either side of highways and railway lines.

It would also be compulsory to offer employment to one member of a farming family that has to sell its land, and a grievances procedure over land purchases would be established at local level. (Additional reporting by Rupam Jain Nair; Writing by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Alan Raybould/Mark Heinrich)
he Indian health ministry’s budget for 2015/16 will be about 244 billion rupees ($4 billion), in line with the current year’s budget, two government sources told Reuters.

The federal government had a planned budget allocation of 306.45 billion rupees ($5 billion) for healthcare in 2014/15, but it was later cut by about 20 percent because of under-utilisation of funds by the health ministry.

Health ministry officials, however, told Reuters in December the cut was imposed because of the government’s deteriorating fiscal situation. India is scrambling to contain its fiscal deficit at 4.1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).

“The funds (health budget) for next year would suffice if the government does not impose a spending cut later this year,” said one of the two sources, neither of whom wanted to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

India spends just 1 percent of its GDP on public health, less than Afghanistan and Sierra Leone.

Despite rapid economic growth over the past two decades, successive federal governments have kept a tight rein on healthcare expenditure. States have separate health budgets.

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