Gulf News

India may have a toned-down and durable economy this year

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The labour market, a vital indicator in a country with a population of 1.4 billion, is fragile: The jobless rate has climbed to a 45-year high of 6.1 per cent.

Just last year, India was the world’s fastest growing major economy. The past decade has been replete with prediction­s it would take up an increasing share of global commerce, alongside China and America. But the Philippine­s and Indonesia grew quicker than India last quarter and Malaysia was just a hair behind.

China, grappling with its own slowdown, logged a respectabl­e 6 per cent and Vietnam was way ahead at 7.3 per cent.

Much of this comes down to the country’s broken financial system. Indian banks struggle with a load of bad loans that’s among the biggest in the world.

Overextend­ed traditiona­l lenders gave way to shadow banks. They, too, ran into walls.

Financial woes

Alarmingly for the Reserve Bank of India, these clogs in the financial pipes mean five interest rate cuts this year haven’t packed much punch. Despite early and aggressive action to lower rates, all the benefits of looser monetary policy aren’t flowing through to the real economy. In difficult times, central bankers usually keep a firm and credible hand on the rudder.

But the RBI has surprised investors a few times this year. An unusual 35 basis-point cut in August, rather than the quarter percentage point economists anticipate­d, looked frivolous rather than clever. A reduction this month seemed like a sure thing until officials baulked. That was a shocking mistake.

Then there’s the issue of unreliable statistics. An academic paper by a former aide to Prime Minister Narendra Modi reckons growth over the past few years was actually a lot closer to the third quarter’s 4.5 per cent figure. Repairing data during a slump is tough because even incrementa­l progress will be overshadow­ed by unflatteri­ng year-ago comparison­s.

This slump doesn’t have to be the end of India’s run. As wrenching as the Asian financial crisis was for the “tiger economies” of Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and South

Korea, they emerged stronger after painful recessions.

Officials bolstered reserves, constraine­d foreign-currency borrowing and scrutinise­d debt levels while central banks became more independen­t. While growth is lower in the aftermath, it’s also more sustainabl­e.

India will always be more important to the world economy than the Philippine­s or Malaysia. Even if activity slows to a snail’s pace for a while, its sheer size makes its contributi­on to global growth far more valuable.

India may yet reclaim its mantle as the next big thing, albeit a toned-down and more durable version. The country and the world could be well-served by this brush with reality.

As soon as next year, India’s monetary and fiscal stimulus will begin to kick in. The economy will likely grow about 5 per cent this year and pick up to 6 per cent in 2020.

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