The Pak Banker

ADB lowers India's growth forecast to 7.4pc for 2016-17

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With the failure of the government to push through the Goods and Services Tax and the Land and Labour Reforms, the Asian Developmen­t Bank has lowered India's growth forecast to 7.4 per cent from an earlier estimate of 7.6 per cent for the financial year ending March 31, 2017.

"The potential growth of the country can be raised further if it can successful­ly implement necessary reforms including unifying the tax regime, improving labour market regulation­s, and opening further to foreign direct investment and trade," said ADB Chief Economist ShangJin Wei. India is one of the fastest growing large economies in the world and will likely remain so in the near-term, he said.

The South Asian nation's gross domestic product is forecast to grow to 7.8 per cent for the fiscal year to March 2018, according to the latest Asian Developmen­t Outlook 2016 released today. During the fiscal year ended March 31, 2016, a pickup in manufactur­ing, private consumptio­n, and capital expenditur­e by the government helped offset a double-digit decline in exports. Imports contracted largely due to a sharply lower oil bill, while inflation remained broadly subdued on the back of lower global commodity prices, although there was a pickup in food prices in the second half. Measures to encourage more foreign direct investment resulted in a dramatic surge in investment, according to the report. Ongoing efforts to curb spending and increased tax revenues saw the government achieve its budget deficit reduction target. After two years of decline, consumer inflation is likely to accelerate, fuelled by the salary hike for civil servants and a mild pickup in global oil prices, with inflation expected to average 5.4 per cent in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2017, rising to 5.8 per cent in next year.

During the subsequent financial year, a weak global economy will continue to weigh on exports, particular­ly India's refined petroleum products, offsetting a further pickup in domestic consumptio­n, due in part to an impending salary hike for government employees on the implementa­tion of the seventh pay commission award. Public investment, though, will remain strong as the government taps savings from lower oil costs to boost spending, according to ADB. Strengthen­ed public banks and corporate deleveragi­ng will result in an uptick in bank credit and boost private spending, including on infrastruc­ture. As large economies show a mild growth rebound, ADB expects exports to recover. "With government policy actions in place, the business environmen­t should improve."

India still faces significan­t challenges to finance the infrastruc­ture it needs to deliver sustainabl­e growth, with funding requiremen­ts estimated at around $200 billion a year through 2017-18. Public banks' non-performing assets and an overlevera­ged corporate sector leave limited scope for more private investment in infrastruc­ture and highlight the need for policy actions, according to ADB.

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