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India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman expects strong growth and lower inflation next year, as central bank authorities seek to stabilize Asia’s third-largest economy amid tough global headwinds.
“External factors were very strong in the inflation-targeting exercise,” Sitharaman said Wednesday at a Reuters event, noting that they were beyond the control of the government and the Reserve Bank of India. “We expect currency volatility to settle on its own.”
India’s consumer price gains fell below 7% for the first time in three months in October. The RBI, which has raised its benchmark rate by 190 basis point this year, is expected to remain hawkish at a monetary policy review next week. Rate setters penned a letter this month to the government explaining their failure to contain inflation between 2% and 6% and outlined a road map for returning prices to target.
Sitharaman declined to describe specifics from the letter, but added that the government’s top three priorities for 2023 will be “growth, health and education.”
The finance minister’s comments come as authorities prepare the annual budget for February. That will be the final full-year budget before citizens elect a new prime minister in the summer of 2024, a time when Indian governments typically loosen their purse strings.
Sitharaman said capital expenditure is a key way to drive growth. The government is offering incentives to firms that scale up manufacturing in India, hoping to capitalize on appetite to diversify operations away from China, she added.
“We are well on the course of meeting the capex target for this year,” Sitharaman said. “States have shown exceptional absorption capacity for taking the monies and spending them on capital assets. That is the only way we think we can sustain our growth because that is the sure-shot way of achieving the multiplier that the economy requires.”
Sitharaman also defended the use of foreign exchange reserves to address the volatility in the currency that touched record lows about a month ago. “All of us are confident that what has happened in terms of using reserves to contain the volatility was the right thing to do,” she said.
Here’s more from Sitharaman:
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“India needs to take care of its own interest on oil and needs to have affordable and sustainable oil,” Sitharaman said when asked whether the nation will join others in putting a price cap on Russian oil -
The government remains very open-minded on expanding the scope of production-linked incentives -
Will focus reforms for multilateral banks, climate finance, regulation of crypto assets during India’s G-20 presidency -
“Crypto assets that are coming like mushrooms will have to be regulated and that cannot be regulated effectively unless countries come together” -
(Updates throughout.)
–With assistance from Adrija Chatterjee.
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