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What are your expectations from inflation now that it is below RBI’s upper tolerance limit?
The average retail inflation is expected to be around 5 per cent, possibly lower if things go well with the monsoon.
WPI inflation is likely to remain negative for the next four months and then pick up. But it will stay subdued not only because of the base effect but also because of subdued commodity prices.
Clearly, this is the end of rate hikes. At the current moment, the issue in the market is the tight liquidity condition. Liquidity is in surplus by a very small amount. What the RBI is not doing through rate hikes, it is doing through liquidity management. We may see some relaxation on the liquidity front by the second quarter of this year.
There is a possibility of rate cuts but we will have to wait till the third quarter of the current financial year. Otherwise, we are expecting rate cuts in the last quarter of the current financial year.
There is demand compression in the Western economies and that is leading to flat demand for many of the goods that we export, such as jewellery, textiles, engineering goods etc. There is also uncertainty in West Asia due to lower oil prices. The situation in China is also impacting regional demand.
There is a slowdown in the domestic economy, particularly on the consumption side, which is affecting imports. Gold demand has reduced, and non-oil and non-gold imports have slowed down.
Although it is just the start of the year, how do you see the country performing on the fiscal deficit front?
On the income side, tax revenue projections are quite conservative but a higher dividend payout by RBI might come as a relief. For me, the fiscal deficit is likely to be on target. If there is some overshoot, it will be very marginal.
I don’t think this year is going to be particularly good for disinvestment. The target is low but the actual collections can actually be lower, given the global macroeconomic conditions and rate hikes.
For FY23, we are predicting an annual GDP growth rate of 6.8 per cent. This is in line with our Q4 prediction of 4.4 per cent. Apart from the base effect, manufacturing could be a drag as the latest numbers show. This is playing out in the domestic market as well as in exports.
This financial year we are estimating a GDP growth between 5.8-6 per cent. In the current quarter, we are expecting India to grow at 6.8 per cent.
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