Arab Times

India will remain one of world’s fastest growing economies: IMF

A welcome news for PM Modi before polls next year

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MUMBAI, Aug 8, (AFP): India will remain one of the world’s fastest-growing major economies in coming years, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said Wednesday, in welcome news for Prime Minister Narendra Modi before elections next year.

In a wide-ranging report on Asia’s third-biggest economy, the IMF commended government economic reforms but called for action to contain inflation and increase the number of women in the workforce.

The Washington-based institutio­n forecast GDP growth for the 2018-2019 fiscal year at 7.3 percent, rising to 7.5 percent the following year.

The pickup follows a fall to 6.7 percent growth in 2017-2018.

The IMF said India was facing a “broadly positive outlook” thanks to “strengthen­ing investment and robust private consumptio­n” but warned of risks from higher fuel prices and a weakening rupee.

Growth expanded to 7.7 percent for the quarter from January to March, the highest for seven quarters, as the economy started to recover from a rocky start to Modi’s economic initiative­s.

Despite teething problems, the IMF commended Modi’s government for introducin­g a nationwide goods and services tax (GST) in 2017, which replaced a myriad of state and national taxes.

But it added that GST, which sets different value-added taxes for different types of goods, could be improved.

“GST has a complex structure with a relatively high number of rates (and exemptions), which could be simplified,” it said.

India’s quarterly growth fell as low as 5.7 percent in mid-2017 as the economy readied for GST and reeled from a shock cash ban in late 2016.

The decision to scrap 86 percent of currency notes, known as “demonetisa­tion”, in November 2016 dealt a major blow to the economy.

The IMF noted that the move had caused “an acute monetary shock” but said the economy has since recovered.

It praised the government for taking measures to tackle crippling debts at India’s public-sector banks and for relaxing rules on foreign direct investment, but said more reforms were still needed.

“India would benefit from further liberalisa­tion of trade and foreign investment,” the IMF said.

It also said India could boost growth further by bringing more women into formal employment. Women are massively underrepre­sented in workplaces across patriarcha­l India.

The IMF said its directors stressed “the importance of modernisin­g labour laws and regulation­s and other measures to help increase formal employment, particular­ly the employment of women”.

Inflation is on the rise due to high oil prices and a falling rupee.

The country, which is expected to hold a general election in spring 2019, imports nearly 80 percent of its oil and fluctuatio­ns in crude oil prices can seriously affect the economy.

The IMF said it projects inflation to rise to 5.2 percent this financial year, well above the target of 4 percent set by India’s central bank and a 17-year-long low of 3.6 during the last fiscal year.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has raised interest rates twice this summer and the IMF said it “will need to gradually tighten policy further, in response to inflation pressures”.

The IMF predicted that India’s current account deficit would widen to 2.6 percent. It also warned of instabilit­y caused by a trade war between the United States and China.

IMF directors “underscore­d that risks to near-term growth persist, mainly arising from volatile oil prices and tightening global financial conditions,” the report said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Vehicles stand in a traffic jam near the France-Luxembourg border in Dudelange, Luxembourg, on early Aug 2, 2018, as people are on their way to work. With a robust economy and a record average annual salary in the OECD, Luxembourg attracts workers. But the expensive real estate prices push nearly one out of two employees to live outside the borders of the Grand Duchy, generating a saturation of transport infrastruc­ture.
(AFP) Vehicles stand in a traffic jam near the France-Luxembourg border in Dudelange, Luxembourg, on early Aug 2, 2018, as people are on their way to work. With a robust economy and a record average annual salary in the OECD, Luxembourg attracts workers. But the expensive real estate prices push nearly one out of two employees to live outside the borders of the Grand Duchy, generating a saturation of transport infrastruc­ture.

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