New Delhi:The spectacle of the government and opposition trading charges on economic policy continued on Friday with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman responding to former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's remark that the government is "obsessed" with fixing the blame on its opponents for things gone wrong, saying it was necessary to recall past mistakes.
"I respect Dr. Manmohan Singh for telling me not to do the blame game. But recalling when and what went wrong during a certain period is absolutely necessary to put it in context, now that I'm being charged that there's no narrative at all about the economy," Sitharaman told reporters in the US, where she is slated to attend the World Bank-IMF meetings.
Manmohan Singh had earlier said here: "I have just seen the statements by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman. I won't like to comment on that statement, but before one can fix the economy, one needs a correct diagnosis of its ailments and their causes. The government is obsessed with trying to fix blame on its opponents, thus it is unable to find a solution that will ensure the revival of the economy."
He had also said that the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had not been in power at the Centre for the last five years, while the BJP-led government was passing the buck.
"When I was in office, what happened did happen. There were some weaknesses. But you can't claim that the fault lies with the UPA always. You have been in office for five years. Mainly passing buck to UPA is not enough," he said.
Singh himself was responding to Sitharaman's earlier remark during her talk at New York's Columbia University that Indian public sector banks had their "worst phase" under Manmohan Singh and former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuraman Rajan.
The Finance Minister latrer said she had made the comment only in response to a particular question about Raghuram Rajan's criticism of "centralised leadership" and the absence of a coherent narrative on the economy.