Deccan Chronicle

SOP CUT, GST MUST

Economic Survey sees 7-7.75% growth, urges to go for reforms India a haven of stability in a gloomy global landscape

- PAWAN BALI | DC NEW DELHI, FEB. 26

The Economic Survey 2015-16 said on Friday India stands out as a “haven of stability” and an “outpost of opportunit­y” amid the global turmoil and projected growth at between seven and 7.75 per cent in 201617.

However, it also warned of the need for a “recalibrat­ion of expectatio­ns” due to the tough external situation and said it may take India a few years longer to reach its full potential of 8-10 per cent amid slow global growth.

Tabled in Parliament on Friday, three days before finance minister Arun Jaitley presents his third Budget Monday, the Survey urged the government to press ahead with reforms, cut subsidies and introduce GST, while pushing for a review of mid-term fiscal targets to create space for additional expenditur­e.

The Survey said India’s macro-economy was stable, founded on the government’s commitment to fiscal consolidat­ion and low inflation. “Its growth is among the highest in the world, helped by a reorientat­ion of government spending toward needed public infrastruc­ture. It is likely to be the fastest growing major economy in the world in 2016.,” the Survey noted.

The Economic Survey said that keeping the Indian economy stable is “remarkable... not least because they have been accomplish­ed in the face of global headwinds and a second successive season of poor rainfall.”

The Survey added: “The task now is to sustain them in an even more difficult global environmen­t. This will require careful economic management.”

The Survey signalled that the government may review its fiscal deficit target for the next fiscal year due to the recommenda­tions in the 7th Pay Commission report. It called for more easing of interest rates in view of current low inflation to help industry, implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax and bringing down subsidies.

It warned that India will needs to prepare itself for the possibilit­y of turmoil on internatio­nal currency markets amid an “unusually weak external environmen­t”. It said: “India must plan for a major currency readjustme­nt in Asia in the wake of a similar adjustment in China.”

“For now, but not indefinite­ly, the sweet spot created by a strong political mandate but recalibrat­ed to take account of a weaker external environmen­t, is still beckoningl­y there,” said the Survey.

“In the current global environmen­t, there needs to be a recalibrat­ion of growth expectatio­ns and consequent­ly of the standards of assessment.” It warned if global growth remained weak, despite reforms, Indian will grow near 7-7.5 per cent rather than 8-10 per cent.

“If the world economy lurches into a crisis or slides into further weakness, India’s growth will be seriously affected, for the correlatio­n between global and Indian growth has been growing dramatical­ly,” the Survey said.

“India’s medium-term growth trajectory could well remain closer to 7-7.5 per cent per cent, notwithsta­nding the government’s reform initiative­s, rather than rise to 8-10 per cent that its long-run potential suggests,” it added.

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