Hindustan Times (East UP)

Budget short on structural reform announceme­nts: Fitch

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NEW DELHI: India’s budget for the fiscal beginning April focuses on giving a boost to the ongoing economic recovery through a sharp increase in capex spending but is short on major growth-enhancing structural reform announceme­nts, Fitch Ratings said Wednesday.

The deficit targets present in the Union budget 2022-23 by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday “are a bit higher than our forecasts when we affirmed India’s ‘BBB’/ Negative sovereign rating in November,” said Jeremy Zook, Director and Primary Sovereign analyst for India, Fitch Ratings.

While it was widely expected that the fiscal deficit will be lower than the targeted 6.8% of the GDP in the current fiscal year ending March 31, 2022, Sitharaman put the number at 6.9%. “Our expectatio­n of modest fiscal outperform­ance in (current) FY22 from last year’s budget target appears unlikely to materialis­e, with the budget flagging a revised deficit of 6.9% of

GDP against our 6.6% forecast,” Fitch said.

“The planned 6.4% of GDP FY23 deficit is also higher than our previous 6.1% forecast.” Sitharaman’s ₹39.45 lakh crore Budget details higher spending on highways to affordable housing to fire up the economy’s key engines to sustain a world-beating recovery from the pandemic.

“This budget illustrate­s the government’s focus on giving a boost to the ongoing economic recovery through a sharp increase in capex spending while relying on economic growth and buoyant revenues to achieve its fiscal sustainabi­lity objectives,” Zook said.

Deficits at the state level could add further pressure to our general government fiscal deficit measure, highlighte­d by the 4% of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) borrowing allowance in FY23.

“From a rating perspectiv­e, we see India as having limited fiscal space as it has the highest general government debt ratio of any ‘BBB’-rated emerging market sovereign at just under 90 per cent of GDP,” the rating agency said.

The gradual pace of fiscal consolidat­ion continues to place the onus on nominal GDP growth to facilitate a downward trajectory in the debt ratio, which is key to resolving the negative outlook on the sovereign rating, it said.

“We will be assessing whether the capex drive’s growth impact is sufficient to offset the higher than expected deficits and keep the debt ratio on a slight downward trajectory,” Zook said. “Our growth forecast is on the high side of consensus expectatio­ns at 10.3% in FY23 and about 7% on average through FY27.” The planned accelerati­on in the infrastruc­ture capex drive will likely provide a fillip to near- and medium-term growth if fully implemente­d. However, potential risks from the pandemic, the durability of private consumptio­n in the light of constraine­d household incomes and recent setbacks to the reform drive pose headwinds, Fitch said.

“Beyond the capex drive, the budget was short on major growth-enhancing structural reform announceme­nts, in our view,” Zook said.

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