Mumbai: India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) said on Wednesday it expects gross domestic product (GDP) to grow at 5.5 per cent year-on-year in the next financial year (FY 20-21) but added that downside risks persist.
This is only a marginal improvement over the GDP growth of 5 per cent estimated by the National Statistical Office for the current financial year (FY 20). The slowdown in the agency's view is a combination of several factors.
Of the prominent ones are an abrupt and significant fall in lending by non-banking financial companies close on the heels of a slowdown in bank lending, reduced income growth of households coupled with a fall in savings and higher leverage, and inability of the dispute resolution and judicial systems to quickly unlock the stuck capital.
"Although some improvement in FY21 is expected, these risks are going to persist. As a result, the Indian economy is stuck in a phase of low consumption as well as low investment demand," said Ind-Ra in a statement.
A strong policy push coupled with some heavy lifting (even if this requires using the escape clause as suggested by the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Review Committee headed by N K Singh) by the government is required to revive the domestic demand cycle and catapult the economy back into a high growth phase, it added.
The government has announced a slew of measures recently to prop-up the economy, but Ind-Ra believes they will come to aid only in the medium term. Therefore, all eyes are on the forthcoming Union Budget to be presented on February 1.
Ind-Ra expects the shortfall in the tax plus non-tax revenue to result in the fiscal deficit slipping to 3.6 per cent of GDP (budgeted 3.3 per cent) in FY20, even after accounting for the surplus transferred by the Reserve Bank of India.
A continuance of low GDP growth even in FY21 means subdued tax revenue and limited room for stepping-up expenditure. Ind-Ra believes the government will have to construct the FY21 Budget in a way that expenditure is rationalised and prioritised and all avenues of revenue generation are tapped.