Bangkok Post

India clocks 7.7% GDP growth in Q4

- ANIRBAN NAG VRISHTI BENIWAL BLOOMBERG

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: India’s growth recovery strengthen­ed last quarter but doubts remain over whether it can sustain that pace amid surging oil prices and a rout in emerging markets.

Gross domestic product in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year that ended in March 2018 rose 7.7%, faster than a revised 7% in the previous quarter.

While that makes it one of the fastest-expanding major economies, risks are rising because of a currency slump and faster inflation.

To add to that, India’s nearly $1.7 trillion formal banking sector is coping with $210 billion of soured or problem loans and fraud scandals have erupted at some regional banks.

That’s set to curb lending and limit growth even more, and makes the central bank’s job even more complicate­d ahead of next week’s policy meeting.

“A sustained rise in oil prices to $100 a barrel could even lead to a re-emergence of some of the external and currency risks that existed pre-2014,” said Priyanka Kishore, head of India and Southeast Asia economics at Oxford Economics Ltd.

“The banking sector remains in a fragile state, and such problems have the potential to derail the ongoing growth recovery.”

The economy expanded at 6.7% in the fiscal year through March, the slowest pace since Prime Minister Narendra Modi took power in 2014.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc cut its growth projection for the year ending March 2019 to 7.6% from 8%, amid concerns that the banking system’s woes are more widespread.

On Wednesday, Moody’s Investors Service cut India’s 2018 GDP growth outlook to 7.3% from 7.5%, citing higher oil prices and tighter financial conditions.

New risks have emerged just as the economic disruption caused by a cash ban late in 2016 and the chaotic roll-out of a national sales tax fade.

India has been swept up in the maelstrom that’s hit emerging markets as rising US interest rates and a stronger dollar prompt investors to pull money out of stocks and bonds.

The rupee has been the hardest hit in Asia, dropping more than 5% against the dollar this year.

For oil-importing India, the combinatio­n of a weaker currency and surging oil prices is a threat not only for the current-account deficit, but also inflation.

Consumer-price growth is already picking up — reaching 4.6% in April — and for a central bank that aims to keep inflation around the 4% midpoint of its target band, an interest-rate hike can’t be far away.

Viral Acharya, the deputy governor in charge of monetary policy, said last month he would vote for a withdrawal in monetary accommodat­ion in June.

There’s also limited room for a fiscal boost to support growth. India’s budget gap is one of the widest in Asia, and Modi has to walk a fine line to keep the deficit in check while trying to woo voters ahead of next year’s election.

Neverthele­ss, green shoots are emerging i n Asia’s t hird-largest economy.

The industrial sector is expected to pick up while services, which contribute­s over 50% to gross domestic product, is set to remain robust. Even farming, which has been a laggard, is recovering.

“Agricultur­al activity is likely to be supported by record food grain output, surge in sugarcane production after two years of decline and a sustained increase in pulses output,” said Teresa John, an economist at Nirmal Bang Equities Pvt Ltd i n Mumbai.

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