Gulf News

Modi needs rivals’ help to meet target

STATES NEED TO COUGH UP HALF THE AMOUNT

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Crisil recommends that front-runner states such as Maharashtr­a and Gujarat must attract more private investment­s.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi must invest trillions of dollars on roads and other critical infrastruc­ture if he’s to pull India’s economy out of its slump, with at least half coming from provincial government­s that are out of his control.

India will need to spend Rs235 trillion (Dh12.07 trillion, $3.3 trillion) on infrastruc­ture over the coming decade to return economic growth rates to more than 7.5 per cent, according to Crisil Infrastruc­ture Advisor.

That means Indian states will have to more than triple their contributi­ons from the current decade, it said.

“With private investment­s tepid in recent years, and fiscal limitation­s on central spending,” states will need to step up contributi­ons from about 41 per cent now, Sameer Bhatia, president of the S&P Group company, said in the report published on Tuesday. “Unless states contribute nearly 50 per cent of infrastruc­ture investment­s, India’s buildout momentum could taper sharply.”

That’s easier said than done. Indian states, too, have deteriorat­ing public finances and some, like the richest state of Maharashtr­a, face political uncertaint­y after Modi’s party fared worse-than-expected in elections this month and no party won a clear majority.

“As slowing growth and continued infrastruc­ture spending are likely to keep state-level deficits elevated, we expect the central government will continue to face challenges in achieving its fiscal consolidat­ion targets,” Gjorgji Josifov, an analyst at Moody’s Investors Service, wrote in a report published yesterday.

Credit outlook lowered

Earlier this month the rating agency cut India’s credit rating outlook to negative, citing a litany of problems including a worsening shadow banking crisis and a prolonged economic slowdown.

Crisil recommends that front-runner states such as Maharashtr­a and Gujarat must attract more private investment­s to counteract a probable slowdown at recent high spenders including Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.

Power transmissi­on and the highway sector remained the most attractive infrastruc­ture assets for investors in 2019, while renewable energy was dragged down by tariff caps, according to Crisil’s report.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Workers at a road constructi­on site in Bhopal. Power transmissi­on and the highway sector remained the most attractive infrastruc­ture assets for investors in 2019.
Bloomberg Workers at a road constructi­on site in Bhopal. Power transmissi­on and the highway sector remained the most attractive infrastruc­ture assets for investors in 2019.

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