Arun Jaitley tasked with reviving India's economic growth

Arun Jaitley, one of the top corporate lawyers in the country and close party colleague to India's new Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was named new finance minister on Tuesday.

India's new Finance Minister Arun Jaitley sits inside his office at the finance ministry in New Delhi May 27, 2014.

Reuters

May 27, 2014

India's new Prime Minister Narendra Modi named Arun Jaitley as finance minister on Tuesday, tasking his close party colleague with reviving investment in an economy that has been growing at its slowest rate in a decade.

Jaitley will also lead the defense ministry as well as corporate affairs, the government said in a statement on Modi's cabinet that was sworn in on Monday.

Modi campaigned on a promise to cut bureaucratic sloth and fight corruption. Analysts say Modi's huge election victory gives him the mandate to advance reforms that stalled under the previous Congress-led, scandal-ridden administration of his prececessor, Manmohan Singh.

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One of the top corporate lawyers in the country, Jaitley served as a commerce minister in a previous government of the Bharatiya Janata Party.

A day after his inauguration, Modi was due to meet Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was among regional leaders invited to the ceremony, amid hopes of a thaw in ties between the two nuclear-armed countries.

Modi named BJP veteran Sushma Swaraj as foreign minister. The Hindu nationalist BJP has long advocated tough positions on national security and Pakistan, in particular.

(Additional reporting by C.K.Nayak; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)