India to push reforms, welcomes inflows - adviser
* Plan panel deputy: India may miss medium term growth target * Food inflation a concern, may moderate by year end
* Govt to move SBI, insurance, pension reform bills-official (Updates with quotes, background)
By Tony Munroe and Rajesh Kumar Singh
NEW DELHI, Nov 4 (Reuters) - India will push ahead with financial sector reforms as they will not destablise growth and Asia's third-largest economy can absorb a welcome rise in foreign investment flows, a top policy adviser said on Wednesday.
Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the deputy chairman of Planning Commission and a close aide to the prime minister, also said food price inflation was a concern but it should moderate by the end of this year.
Addressing the annual economic editors' conference, Ahluwalia said a rise in foreign investment flows was good for the economy, but authorities would keep a vigil on short-term debt flows.
"I think we can absorb those foreign investment flows. Obviously we will remain watchful on flows of short-term debt and so on but a revival of foreign investment flows is very welcome," he said.
Between April and September, the first half of the 2009/10 fiscal year, foreign direct investment was in excess of $15 billion and portfolio investment were almost the same, Trade Minister Anand Sharma said separately. [ID:nBMA006347]
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