Business Standard

2ND WAVE A THREAT TO INDIA’S RATING: MOODY’S

Financial sector could become the main driver of potential risk to the sovereign

- ANUP ROY Mumbai, 1 June

Moody’s has said that even as the Indian economy has rebounded quickly from a steep contractio­n in 2020, the second wave of the pandemic poses a threat to the sovereign rating. The main risk will come from the financial sector, it said.

Global rating agency Moody’s has said that even as the Indian economy has rebounded quickly from a steep contractio­n in 2020, the second wave of the pandemic poses a threat to the sovereign rating.

The main risk will come from the financial sector, the rating agency warned on Tuesday.

“A severe second wave of the coronaviru­s has increased risks to the outlook with potential longer-term credit implicatio­ns. Risks to India’s credit profile, including a persistent slowdown in growth, weak government finances and rising financial sector risks, have been exacerbate­d by the shock,” Moody’s said at a frequently asked questions (FAQ) update.

The rating agency has a

Baa3 (negative) rating for India, which is the lowest investment grade in its rating scale.

The financial sector is turning risky after the pandemic.

“India’s financial sector is the main driver of potential event risk to the sovereign. Whether the feedback loop between the real economy and the financial sector settles in a credit-supportive or credit-hindering mode will shape India’s credit profile,” the rating agency said.

So far, the second wave has increased financial risks to households and small businesses, which may hurt bank profitabil­ity, it said, adding, “new loan forbearanc­e and liquidity measures by the central bank, and government plans to set up an asset reconstruc­tion company to take over stressed loans, along with modest recapitali­zation of public sector banks, will mitigate, but not eliminate, sector risks”.

The reimpositi­on of lockdown measures along with behavioura­l changes over the fear of contagion will curb economic activity, but the impact may not be as severe as the first wave, Moody’s said.

The rating agency expects a decline in economic activity in the first quarter ending June, followed by a rebound, “resulting in real, inflation-adjusted GDP growth of 9.3 per cent in the fiscal year ending March 2022 (fiscal 2021) and 7.9% in fiscal 2022”, it said. Before the pandemic, Moody’s was expecting 10 per cent growth for fiscal 2023.

The pandemic, however, “will leave new economic scars and deepen pre-pandemic constraint­s”.

India’s growth potential gets constraine­d by structural inefficien­cies and limits its resilience to shocks, it said. This is because India’s per capita income of around $6,500 on a purchasing power parity basis in 2020 is far below the Baa-rated median of around $25,200. In the near term, also, job losses and business closures from lockdowns during the two coronaviru­s waves have damaged the income and savings of those who are unable to work from home. A vast majority of jobs in India are with micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) and in informal sectors, due to which households have been hit badly by the lockdowns.

“If implemente­d effectivel­y, government reforms that target these challenges would be credit positive.

However, the relatively low effectiven­ess of previous reforms informs our medium- to long-term growth view. Over the longer term, we expect real GDP growth to average around 6 per cent,” the rating agency said.

The rating agency expects the general government deficit (centre plus state deficits) to be at 11.8 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP), provided there is a “small shortfall in budgeted revenue and a redirectio­n of spending toward the response to the pandemic”. In such a scenario, the general government debt burden will be 90.3 per cent of GDP in fiscal 2021.

“Debt-to-gdp will edge up to 92.0 per cent by fiscal 2023, largely driven by relatively slow economic growth.”

The rating agency harped on the importance of ramping up the vaccinatio­n drive, as potential subsequent waves of infections add risk to the forecasts.

“The government’s ability to limit the spread of the virus and materially increase the rate of vaccinatio­ns will have a direct impact on the trajectory of both health and economic outcomes.”

As of late May, only around 15 per cent of the country’s population had received at least one dose of the vaccine as a shortage of vaccines and the ability to reach rural population­s have complicate­d the rollout.

However, as the internatio­nal community has also chipped in, Moody’s expects the pace of vaccinatio­ns to pick up this summer, with substantia­l progress by the end of 2021.

India’s growth potential gets constraine­d by structural inefficien­cies and limits its resilience to shocks, it said

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India