Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘INDIA’S GROWTH PROJECTION­S ARE AMBITIOUS’

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Moody’s Investors Service said that growth projection­s made by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the budget appear ambitious given the structural and cyclical challenges facing the economy.

NEW DELHI: Moody’s Investors Service on Tuesday said economic growth projection­s made by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the Union Budget 2020-21 appear ambitious given the structural and cyclical challenges facing the Indian economy.

The budget expects nominal gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 10% in FY21, followed by 12.6% and 12.8% in FY2022 and FY23. But, Moody’s saw GDP growth rising to around 8.7% in the next financial year beginning April 1 from about 7.5% in the current fiscal.

Stating that growth outlook will remain weak, it has put real GDP growth during the fiscal ending March 31 at 4.9%, slightly below the government’s forecast of 5%. For the next fiscal, it estimated real GDP growth of 5.5%, lower than 6-6.5% projected by the Economic Survey.

“Growth has remained relatively weak as a prolonged deleveragi­ng cycle and ongoing stress among non-banking financial institutio­ns (NBFIS), which has constraine­d the financial system’s overall provision of credit, weigh on consumptio­n and investment,” it said in a detailed commentary on the budget.

For FY21, it lowered real GDP growth forecasts to 5.5% from 6.3%. For the following fiscal, it put the real GDP growth at 6% from 6.7% projected earlier.

“The significan­t slowdown in financial sector credit growth from NBFI liquidity constraint­s and asset quality issues among public sector banks has exacerbate­d prolonged weakness in private investment and a material decline in consumptio­n, due in part to financial stress among rural households and weak job creation,” Moody’s said.

The nominal GDP growth, it said, has also declined significan­tly.

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