Hindustan Times (East UP)

India on track to recover by next fiscal: S&P

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NEW DELHI: S&P Global Ratings on Tuesday said Indian economy is on track for a recovery in the next fiscal year beginning April 1, as consistent good performanc­e of the farm sector, flattening Covid-19 infection curve, and a pickup in government spending are all supporting the economy.

Stating that India needs many things to be right for its recovery to continue, S&P said the country needs to quickly and thoroughly vaccinate most of its 1.4 billion people.

“The emergence of yet more contagious Covid-19 variants with the potential to evade vaccine-derived immunity present a major risk to this recovery. As does the possibilit­y of early withdrawal of global fiscal stimulus,” S&P said in a report titled ‘Cross-sector outlook: India’s escape from COVID’.

It said the budget for fiscal 2021-22, will also support the recovery, with higher than expected expenditur­es. India’s improving growth prospects are critical to its ability to sustain the higher deficits associated with its more aggressive fiscal stance.

The economy still faces important risks as it transition­s from stabilisat­ion to recovery. We estimate that India faces a permanent loss of output versus its pre-pandemic path, suggesting a long-term production deficit equivalent to about 10% of GDP, S&P said.

“The Indian economy is on track for a recovery in fiscal 2022, bolstering corporate earnings and demand for utilities. The recovery’s pace and scale determines the sustainabi­lity of the government’s higher fiscal deficit and debt stock... Consistent­ly good agricultur­e performanc­e, a flattening of the Covid-19 infection curve, and a pickup in government spending are all supporting the economy,” S&P said.

The rating agency said a sustained earnings rebound is key for ratings to stabilise as roughly one quarter of ratings are still on negative outlook.

On the banking front, S&P estimates the system’s weak loans ratio at 12% of gross loans and credit cost to remain elevated at 2.2-2.7%.

“Faster economic recovery and steps taken by the Reserve Bank of India and the Indian government to cushion the effect of the economic crisis have helped ease the stress on bank balance sheets,” S&P said.

 ?? HT ?? The farm sector’s consistent good performanc­e and pick up in government spending will lead the recovery.
HT The farm sector’s consistent good performanc­e and pick up in government spending will lead the recovery.

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