Business Standard

India fiscal health weak for QE: Moody’s

- ANUP ROY

A quantitati­ve easing (QE) programme by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may not go well with the country’s fundamenta­ls, even as it bought ~3.13 trillion of debt from the secondary market in the last fiscal year and committed to ~1 trillion of bond purchase in the first quarter.

India is among the 11 emerging markets (EMS) that have jumped on the QE bandwagon. But it has one of the highest public debts and weakest debt affordabil­ity, global rating agency Moody’s said on Wednesday.

Chile, Colombia, Croatia, Ghana, Hungary, India, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Poland, South Africa and Turkey have recently announced their own versions of QE, so far the reserve of developed economies. But the fundamenta­ls of these economies vary widely.

While most of the 11 EM central banks score well in Moody’s assessment of macroecono­mic stability, “with the exception of Chile, most of the 11 EMS have weak government effectiven­ess, suggesting potential risks executing fiscal reforms or consolidat­ion plans”.

“Debt affordabil­ity varies widely, with Ghana and India (Baa3 negative) weakest,” Moody’s said.

Also, “across the 11 EMS, India, South Africa and

Ghana have the highest public debt and weakest debt affordabil­ity”.

A number of EMS score quite weakly on government effectiven­ess (close to 0), suggesting they may find it more difficult to implement fiscal reforms or consolidat­ion. India’s score at 0.17, per Moody’s methodolog­y, lands it at the seventh spot in the list of 11.

Echoing Moody’s finding, UBS economist Tanvee Gupta Jain pointed out India’s public debt (as a percentage of GDP) has risen from 72 per cent in FY20 to 89 per cent in FY21.

“Our estimates indicate that nominal GDP needs to grow at least 10 per cent YOY to help stabilise public debt levels at the current high levels before bringing it down,” she said.

Among global EMS, India will have the third-highest public debt to GDP ratio, after Argentina and Brazil, in 2021. “We believe the key for debt sustainabi­lity is the ability and speed with which the government can deliver on promises made in the Budget, specifical­ly with regard to aggressive divestment/privatisat­ion targets and also higher public capex spending to help support nominal GDP growth,” she said.

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