Khaleej Times

Foreign inflows help fund India deficit

- Anirban Nag — Bloomberg

mumbai — Economists are betting that India has seen the back of the impact of its unpreceden­ted cash ban, prompting foreigners to pour in investment that’s crucial to help bridge a widening current account deficit.

Deutsche Bank estimates that foreign direct investment touched $37.4 billion April-January, on track to exceed the previous fiscal year’s about $45 billion, with signs of recovery after a plunge late last year as the US prepared to tighten policy and India announced demonetisa­tion. Overseas investors’ holdings of Indian stocks and bonds have also picked up, rising more than $8 billion in 2017.

While Asia’s third-largest economy is forecast to grow at one of the fastest paces in the world, Prime Minister Narendra Modi needs this money. Domestic private investment is slumping and the central bank’s shift to a neutral policy stance makes it unlikely to recover soon. Meanwhile US President Donald Trump’s threatened crackdown on immigratio­n risks further slowing service exports and remittance­s, key revenue earners for India.

“India’s current account deficit is being financed in large part by foreign direct investment inflows,” said Shilan Shah, Singapore-based economist at Capital Economics. “This is a positive reflection of Prime Minister Modi’s policies to encourage direct investment, and should make India less vulnerable to shifts in global risk appetite.”

The shortfall in the broadest measure of trade widened to $7.9 billion in October-December from $3.4 billion the previous quarter, data showed last week. However this was smaller than the $12 billion gap estimated in a Bloomberg survey, as a smaller trade deficit offset a drop in service exports and remittance­s.

Ever since its current account deficit ballooned to a record in 2013, Indian policy makers have been trying to shrink the shortfall and safeguard the economy from global swings. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in February proposed to get rid of a bureaucrat­ic barrier to FDI and the government says India is now one of the most open economies in the world. Foreignexc­hange reserves jumped $2.7 billion in the week to March 17 — the biggest increase since September 2016 — to $366.7 billion, Reserve Bank of India data showed on Friday. The rise comes amid speculatio­n the central bank has been intervenin­g to mop up dollars and prevent a sharp appreciati­on in the rupee.

Modi may be comforted by the recent stabilisat­ion in global oil prices after a brief rebound, economists say. The goods and services tax, scheduled for July, is expected to simplify compliance, boost revenue and make it much easier to do business in India. “We expect reforms in the FDI space to continue which, along with the focus on improving ease of doing business conditions and GST implementa­tion should help to sustain the positive momentum in the period ahead,” said Kaushik Das, Mumbai-based senior economist at Deutsche Bank.

India’s $2 trillion economy is forecast to grow 7.1 per cent in the year through March, though that may be downgraded once there’s more clarity on the impact of the cash ban.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? India’s $2 trillion economy is forecast to grow 7.1 per cent in the year through March.
— Bloomberg India’s $2 trillion economy is forecast to grow 7.1 per cent in the year through March.

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