Business Standard

UN body projects 7-yr low GDP growth for India

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD) has pegged India’s economic growth rate at a seven-year low of 6 per cent in calendar year (CY) 2019. It also highlighte­d the pitfalls of shadow banking in countries such as India and China, citing the example of Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS).

The UN body also pointed towards challenges in meeting sustainabl­e developmen­t goals (SDGS) at a time when private debts are rising globally.

India’s economy grew 7.4 per cent in CY18. It grew below 6 per cent in 2012 — called the policy paralysis year — under the UPA 2 government.

“Growth projection­s for India have been marked down because of a sharp fall to 5.8 per cent in the first quarter of CY19 (relative to the correspond­ing quarter of the previous CY),” said UNCTAD in its trade and developmen­t report for 2019.

It should be noted that UNCTAD did not take into account an over 6year low economic growth rate of 5 per cent that the country recorded during the second quarter of CY19.

Highlighti­ng the risks of shadow banking, it said such institutio­ns were fragile alternativ­es to public banks and developmen­t finance institutio­ns, as the roles of the latter were reduced or done away with, as part of liberalisa­tion.

Quoting a study, UNCTAD said an example of this developmen­t was Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS), which sourced capital using short-term instrument­s such as commercial papers (CPS) to fund long-term investment­s.

This maturity mismatch did not prove to be a problem initially, because of the presumptio­n that being a government-sponsored entity, it enjoyed sovereign guarantee.

Owned one-third by state-owned financial entities, IL&FS was one of the largest issuers of CPS and enjoyed a triple-a credit rating.

However, by August 2018, it suffered a series of bond defaults by group entities, leading to a change in management, legal proceeding­s, and a painful restructur­ing of the company that is still in progress, UNCTAD said.

The report also highlighte­d concerns over SDGS. It said these concerns were compounded by the dizzying rise in debt levels to a scale similar to those seen before the financial crisis.

“If the routine warnings from financial analysts and at global gatherings are to be believed, the addiction to debt is no longer sustainabl­e," it said.

The report suggested that meeting financing demands of SD G s required rebuilding multilater­alism around the idea of a ‘Global Green New Deal’, and forging, by implicatio­n, a different collective financial future.

 ??  ?? UNCTAD highlighte­d the pitfalls of shadow banking in countries such as India and China, citing the example of Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services
UNCTAD highlighte­d the pitfalls of shadow banking in countries such as India and China, citing the example of Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services

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