Finance Minister P Chidambaram on Thursday said some tough decisions taken by the government recently may have caused "immediate pain" but were necessary to bring down fiscal deficit.
Addressing the National Development Council (NDC) meeting here, the Finance Minister said: "It was imperative to contain the fiscal deficit by augmenting resources and controlling expenditure.
"...some measures may cause immediate pain but this was necessary to ensure that the fiscal deficit came down to 3 per cent in the next three years. Steps were also being taken to contain the Current Account Deficit (CAD)."
The government in the recent past has hiked diesel prices by over Rs5 per litre and capped the number of subsidised LPG cylinders to six per family in a year.
The Minister also underlined the need to control gold import, which has contributed $64 billion to the widening CAD.
Chidambaram, however, expressed optimism that the Indian economy would continue to grow at a healthy rate despite the global economic troubles.
This, he said, is because "our economy has strong fundamentals and factors such as high savings rate, growing services sector, a large middle class which continues to create demand and technical and qualified manpower and the youth".