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This is on the back of improvement in corporate and bank balance sheets in the past few years, supported by the government’s infrastructure drive, the rating agency said.
Fitch’s GDP forecast for FY24 is still lower than many agencies, including Asian Development Bank and World Bank, but higher than that of the International Monetary Fund.
“These are offset by India’s weak public finances, illustrated by high deficits and debt relative to peers, as well as lagging structural indicators, including World Bank governance indicators and GDP per capita,” it said, and added that growth was expected to rebound to 6.7 per cent by FY25.
Fitch said while inflation was expected to decline, it would remain near the upper end of the Reserve Bank of India’s target band, and was expected to average 5.8 per cent in FY24 from 6.7 per cent last year.
“We believe it will be challenging to achieve this target, which would require accelerated consolidation of 0.7 percentage points per year in FY25 and FY26, compared with 0.3 bps in FY23 and 0.5 bps in FY24. Future deficit reduction is likely to come mainly from trimming expenditure, in our view,” it said.
“The improvement is driven by robust services exports and buoyant remittances, combined with a moderating goods deficit from declining oil prices. Services exports have boomed as domestic technology firms have moved up the value chain and multinationals have offshored back-office operations to India amid tight labour markets globally,” it said.
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