This story is from September 12, 2019

India doesn't need 'foolish theories about millennials', but concrete plan to fix economy: Rahul Gandhi

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi attacked the Modi govt over the state of the economy, saying what India needs is not propaganda, manipulated news cycles and foolish theories about millennials, but a concrete plan to fix the economy. The remark came days after finance minister Sitharaman attributed the slowdown in auto sector to millenials preference for cab-hailing services.
India doesn't need foolish theories about millennials: Rahul Gandhi
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi (File photo)
Key Highlights
  • Gandhi's attack comes just days after Nirmala Sitharaman said that the slowdown in the auto sector was due to many factors like the change in mindset of millennials, who now prefer Ola and Uber instead of buying a car
  • 'Acknowledging that we have a problem is a good place to start,' the former Congress president said
NEW DELHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Thursday attacked the Narendra Modi government over the state of the economy, saying what India needs is not propaganda, manipulated news cycles and foolish theories about millennials, but a concrete plan to fix the economy.
Gandhi's attack on the government comes two days after finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Chennai on Tuesday said that the slowdown in the automobile sector was due to many factors like the change in mindset of millennials, who now prefer taxi aggregators like Ola and Uber, instead of committing for monthly installments to own a car.


"What India needs isn't propaganda, manipulated news cycles & foolish theories about millennials, but a concrete plan to #FixTheEconomy that we can all get behind," Gandhi said in a tweet.
"Acknowledging that we have a problem is a good place to start," the former Congress president said.
RG tweet 2

Gandhi also tagged an interview of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in which he had said the government must simplify and rationalise GST, kickstart rural consumption, revive agriculture and tackle the lack of credit for capital creation.
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