Business World

India expects to regain post as fastest-growing major economy

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NEW DELHI — India on Monday forecast gross domestic product (GDP) growth would accelerate to 7-7.5% in the 2018/19 fiscal year, to once again become the world’s fastestgro­wing major economy.

The government’s economic survey, presented to parliament on Monday went on to say that though the plan has been to reduce the fiscal deficit from an estimated 3.2% this year to 3.0% in 2018/19, a pause in the move toward a lower deficit could be merited in order to give the economy momentum.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalis­t government is gearing up for a general election in 2019, and speaking to reporters after the survey’s release, the finance ministry’s chief economic adviser alluded to political considerat­ions for possibly letting the deficit target slip.

“The cycle calls for ambitious consolidat­ion but the political cycle calls for maybe more modest consolidat­ion so it has to be a balance between the two,” Arvind Subramania­m said.

The survey, an annual report the health of the economy, was released ahead of the government’s budget statement, due to be presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Thursday.

“A series of major reforms undertaken over the past year will allow real GDP growth to reach 6.75% this fiscal ( year) and will rise to 7.0 to 7.5% in 2018/19, thereby reinstatin­g India as the world’s fastest- growing major economy,” the survey said.

A senior official at China’s National Developmen­t and Reform Commission ( NDRC) wrote in the Beijing daily on Monday that India’s main economic rival in Asia was likely to see growth slow to 6.5-6.8% this year.

Fuelled by stronger private investment and exports, the recovery forecast for India’s growth rate comes after the country posted its slowest growth in three years in 2017/18.

The slowdown was partly a consequenc­e of the chaotic rollout of a nationwide goods and service tax (GST) last year and a shock move to take high value currency notes out of circulatio­n in late 2016.

The budget is expected to step up funding of rural developmen­t programmes and help small businesses as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalis­t government heads into a national election in 2019.

“GDP growth might be at the lower end of the range but, broadly, the estimates are in line with our expectatio­ns,” said Suvodeep

Rakshit, senior economist at Kotak Institutio­nal Equities in Mumbai.

“The government will likely focus on rural and urban infrastruc­ture, housing, agricultur­e as well as bit on the capital expenditur­e front with a judicious mix of budgetary and extra budgetary expenditur­e.”

The survey cautioned that persistent­ly high oil prices remained a key risk for a country that relies on imports for much of its fuel needs.

The survey echoes the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s ( IMF) expectatio­n that India will regain the title of being the world’s fastest growing major economy in the coming fiscal year. The IMF last week predicted India would grow 7.4% in fiscal 2019.

The government also warned that climate change could pare back annual agricultur­al incomes in India by 15-25% with unirrigate­d lands being harder hit by rising temperatur­es and declines in rainfall.

Already, farm incomes have fallen because of the rising cost of production while crop prices have not risen, presenting a potential risk to Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party in the upcoming election after it barely won re- election in his home state of Gujarat last month. —

 ??  ?? A DEC. 11, 2017 photo shows workers listening to safety instructio­ns during a briefing at the start of their shift at a metro railway working site in Mumbai, India.
A DEC. 11, 2017 photo shows workers listening to safety instructio­ns during a briefing at the start of their shift at a metro railway working site in Mumbai, India.

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