Industrialists and businessmen have responded that arrangements such as production, export, tax exemptions, and excise duty concessions have provided relief and encouragement to the private sector.
We use Google Cloud Translation Services. Google requires we provide the following disclaimer relating to use of this service:
This service may contain translations powered by Google. Google disclaims all warranties related to the translations, expressed or implied, including any warranties of accuracy, reliability, and any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and noninfringement.
The budget for the fiscal year 2083/084, which was announced by the government on Friday, has been welcomed by industrialists and businessmen of Morang as being private sector-friendly. They said that the provisions such as production, export, tax exemption and excise duty concessions have given relief and encouragement to the private sector.
Industrialists have said that many of the demands that have been raised for a long time have been addressed through the budget. Industrialists say that there is hope that economic activity will be active due to the encouragement of manufacturing industries, subsidies in export trade, the provision of removing excise duty on some items and income tax concessions.
Asian Thai Food operator and Biratnagar industrialist Mahesh Jaju said that this time the government has brought the budget with the private sector at the center. Stating that sufficient priority was not given to promoting the private sector in previous budgets, he said that this time the budget has sent a positive message to the economic sector. ‘This budget seems to make industry and business active,’ he said.
According to him, the government's decision to remove excise duty on 360 items has made industrialists excited. He said that the policy of subsidies given to export trade and concessions to the manufacturing sector will help make domestic industries competitive. 'Overall, the budget is good, now there is a need for its effective implementation,' he said. 
Jaju commented that it would be difficult to meet the revenue target set by the government without controlling smuggling in the border areas. 'Last year, about 10 trillion rupees in revenue were collected, this time the target is 14 trillion rupees,' he said. 'If smuggling control and market management are not effective, it will be a challenge to meet the target.'
Kiran Vyas, executive member of the Morang Industry Organization and chairperson of the women's committee, said that this time's budget is more positive than the previous one. 'This budget has come in favor of the private sector. It has made industrialists and businessmen excited,' she said.
She considered the policy of giving priority to export trade subsidies, income tax exemptions, excise duty exemptions and production-oriented sectors as important . ‘It seems that the government is trying to cover all sectors,’ she said, ‘especially the budget has indicated that it will provide relief to industry and business.’ 
Pawan Kumar Sarada, President of the Confederation of Nepalese Industries, Koshi, said that many issues that the private sector has been raising for a long time have been addressed through the budget. ‘The government has brought a budget as expected by the private sector,’ he said, ‘This time the budget has worked to instill confidence in investors.’
He said that the budget is focused on increasing production, creating jobs and promoting exports. However, he said that the implementation aspect will be challenging due to the size of the budget. ‘Even if the policy is good, its results will be visible only if the implementation is effective,’ he added. 
