The Free Press Journal

India may not have to wait 13 years for next upgrade: Report

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With the government committed to fiscal consolidat­ion, India might not have to wait for 13 long years for next sovereign upgrade by a rating agency, a SBI research report said on Friday.

The US-based Moody's on Friday upgraded India's sovereign credit rating by a notch to 'Baa2' with a stable outlook.

The upgrade comes after a gap of 13 years. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has termed the upgrade as a "belated recognitio­n" of reforms in the last few years, and vowed to continue them while maintainin­g fiscal discipline.

"We believe that India would need not wait for 13 long years for the next upgrade as the government is firm and committed to adhere with the fiscal consolidat­ion path," said the country's largest lender in its 'Ecowrap'. It further said the government's recent Rs 2.11 lakh crore recapitali­sation

plan will state-owned banks, which help improve health of are grappling with high non- performing and restructur­ed assets.

"Further, recent reform measures (like GST, RERA, Bankruptcy and Insolvency code) will improve overall economic and investment sentiment in the country," it said. Also, inflation is stable and within target, while current account deficit is at sustainabl­e level.

On fiscal front, the report said the markets would now definitely factor in a higher fiscal deficit in 2017-18. "In our view, this would be perfectly justified given the centre's short-term revenue losses due to GST," it said.

Referring to the pending Open Market Operations (OMO) sales on November 23 by RBI, the report said cumulative sales for the year would touch Rs 1 lakh crore. "We think that the central bank should stop further OMO sales for now," it said. The Reserve Bank has been sucking out liquidity since July through OMO.

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