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Home BUSINESS

Delays in regulatory clearances can lead to uncertainty, says FM

Press Trust of india by Press Trust of india
May 20, 2025
in BUSINESS
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India loves celebrating and recognising its diversity: Finance Minister Sitharaman

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New Delhi: Delays in regulatory clearances can lead to uncertainty and disrupt commercial timelines, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Tuesday as India negotiates trade deals with various countries, including the US.

According to Sitharaman, also the Corporate Affairs Minister, it is imperative that regulatory frameworks, while maintaining rigorous oversight, also facilitate swift and seamless approvals for combinations that pose no harm to competition.

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At the function to mark the 16th Annual Day of the Competition Commission of India (CCI), Sitharaman said the regulator has emerged as a key institution in safeguarding the spirit of liberalisation while checking its excesses and stressed that competition drives efficiency, nurtures innovation, and benefits consumers.

Delving into the aspects of competitive markets, the minister said that not only business conduct but also government policies, laws and regulations should not influence competition as she mentioned that entry barriers, licensing norms or procurement rules can also create distortion.

In today’s interconnected and fast-paced global economy, Sitharaman said delays in regulatory clearances can lead to uncertainty, disrupt commercial timelines, and potentially erode the intended value of transactions.

“Globally, it has an impact even as we negotiate free trade agreements with different countries because the ability, the nimbleness and the readiness of regulators is very keenly watched by investors. There is no need for me to underline the importance of that, but that has a very serious connotation when you are looking at fairly within a reasonable time, agreeing on some free trade agreements.

“So, whether it is litigation, whether it is time consumed in litigation or when regulators are less transparent, negotiations can get complicated,” the minister said.

India is negotiating trade deals with various countries and blocs, including the US and the European Union.

While pitching for regulatory frameworks to facilitate swift and seamless approvals for combinations that pose no harm to competition, Sitharaman also mentioned about the Green Channel mechanism that has been put in place by CCI.

The mechanism, which is a trust-based, risk-calibrated approach, allows for automated approval of combinations that are deemed to have no appreciable adverse effect on competition in order to reduce transaction costs and timelines for benign mergers and acquisitions, she added.

“Prices fall not due to charity, but because someone else is willing to offer the same product for less. Quality improves not due to a sense of ethics, but because mediocrity is punished by market forces,” the minister said.

For a country like India, Sitharaman said that ensuring free and fair markets is not merely an economic need, it is a democratic one.

“In an export-challenged, environment-challenged, energy-challenged, and emissions-challenged world, the increased reliance on domestic growth levers requires ensuring the right balance of regulation and freedom,” the minister said.

Further, she said the country’s ongoing structural reforms — asset monetisation, disinvestment, and digital public infrastructure — are all geared towards unlocking market potential and deepening competition.

“As India integrates further with global value chains and digital ecosystems, maintaining open and contestable markets will be crucial to our competitiveness,” she added.

CCI works to ensure fair competition and curbs anti-competitive practices in the marketplace.

The Commission has emerged as a key institution in safeguarding the spirit of liberalisation while checking its excesses. “Competition drives efficiency, nurtures innovation, and benefits consumers,” Sitharaman said in the national capital.

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