Business Standard

Rating agencies cut India’s growth forecast for FY21

Impact on wages to severely dent consumptio­n: India Ratings

- PUNEET WADHWA & ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

Global and domestic rating agencies have sharply cut their forecast for India’s economic growth this fiscal year, after the official data showed a sharpertha­n-expected GDP contractio­n in the June quarter and sluggish recovery in indicators thereafter.

Fitch now expects India’s GDP to contract 10.5 per cent in FY21, compared to its earlier estimate of 5 per cent. India Ratings, its whollyowne­d Indian subsidiary, predicts a fall of 11.8 per cent in real GDP.

Goldman Sachs, which had earlier estimated an 11.8 per cent contractio­n, has now estimated it at 14.8 per cent.

India’s real GDP contracted by a record 24 per cent in Q1, beating the average estimate of 1820 per cent.

“The severe fall in economic activity has damaged household and corporate incomes and balance sheets, amid limited fiscal support. The looming deteriorat­ion in asset quality for the financial sector will hold back credit provision,” said Fitch.

However, domestic and global agencies are not on the same page when it comes to speed of recovery.

While Fitch expects the economy to rebound strongly in Q2, India Ratings predicts contractio­n in all four quarters of FY21, expecting a rebound in FY22. It has projected 9.9 per cent growth in real GDP during FY22, mostly due to a favourable base effect.

Predicting a sharper recovery, Goldman Sachs has pegged real GDP growth at 15.7 per cent in FY22, and a massive 27.1 per cent in the June 2021 quarter.

“Real output in March 2022 will still be around 2 per cent below the March 2020 level,” said Prachi Mishra and Andrew Tilton of Goldman Sachs in a note. At the same time, Fitch expects global GDP to fall 4.4 per cent in 2020, a modest upward revision from the 4.6 per cent expected earlier.

“Recovery in economic activity has been swifter than anticipate­d. China has already regained its pre-virus GDP levels and retail sales in the US, France, and the UK now exceed February levels,” Fitch wrote about global economic recovery. “But we doubt this will become the muchlauded V-shaped recovery. Unemployme­nt shocks lie ahead in Europe, firms are cutting capex, and social distancing continues to restrict privatesec­tor spending,” said Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch Ratings.

India Ratings now expects a dent of 9.1 per cent in India’s nominal GDP, against its earlier estimate of 3.4 per cent. This would take FY21 nominal GDP down to ~1.85 trillion, lower than the FY19 level of ~1.9 trillion.

“Only in Q3FY22 will India’s nominal

GDP be higher than Q4FY20 — a loss of nearly two years,” said Devendra Pant, chief economist, India Ratings.

He added that wages occupied a third of the nominal GDP. “A washout of ~18.5 trillion in nominal GDP translates to the vanishing of ~6 trillion worth of wages.”

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