Modi 3.0 Cabinet: From Amit Shah, Nirmala Sitharaman, Jaishankar to Rajnath Singh – 10 ministers who retained portfolios"All solutions to electoral losses need not be translated into populism and away from a macro framework built over the last decade. We expect the government to remain fiscally prudent and populism to be used opportunistically," Kotak said.Prime Minister Narendra Modi was sworn in as prime minister for the third consecutive term on Sunday, June 9, along with his 71 ministers.
He allocated portfolios to the newly elected ministers in his cabinet on Monday, June 10, and the first cabinet meeting took place in Delhi on the same day.Read more: Modi 3.0 Cabinet Live UpdatesKotak Securities expects the coalition government to see an increase in compromises, and the interests of coalition partners will need to be given relatively higher priority due to the weaker strength of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in National Democratic Alliance (NDA) 3.0."Demands from Andhra Pradesh and Bihar for higher budgetary allocation (comparable with special status) may result in at least ₹500 billion additional allocations. The executive agenda may become more consultative," said Kotak.However, BJP’s lower seat count may not result in a significant impact on fiscals."While BJP’s lower seat count will be linked to the need for more populism, we believe that not all solutions need to be fiscal-led," said Kotak.Also Read: PE ratio ineffective for valuing certain sectors and stocks in India: Kotak SecuritiesThe brokerage firm underscored that assembly elections in Haryana, Jharkhand, Maharashtra (all in Oct-Dec 2024) and Bihar (November 2025) could imply populism on the state government’s agenda rather than the Centre’s."The
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