ADVERTISEMENT

Fitch Cuts India’s FY20 GDP Growth Forecast To 5.5%

The Indian economy decelerated for the fifth consecutive quarter in April-June.



A construction worker stands on the construction site of a housing block in Sector 105 of Noida, in Uttar Pradesh. (Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg)
A construction worker stands on the construction site of a housing block in Sector 105 of Noida, in Uttar Pradesh. (Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg)

Fitch Ratings slashed India’s gross domestic product growth forecast in the current fiscal to 5.5 percent saying a large credit squeeze emanating from non-banking financial firms has pushed economic growth to a six-year low.

Fitch, which had in June this year put India’s growth at 6.6 percent for the fiscal, said the recent government measures to boost economy including a cut in corporate tax rates will gradually nudge growth.

The projection is lower than 6.1 percent that the Reserve Bank of India had forecast in early October. GDP expansion will pick up to 6.2 percent in the next financial year (2020-21) and to 6.7 percent in the year after, Fitch said.

The Indian economy decelerated for the fifth consecutive quarter in April-June, with GDP expanding by a meager 5 percent, down from 8 percent recorded a year earlier. This is the lowest growth outturn since 2013.

Weakness has been fairly broad-based, with both domestic spending and external demand losing momentum. Weakness has been fairly broad-based, with both domestic spending and external demand losing momentum.
Fitch Ratings

Earlier this month, Moody’s Investors Service slashed its 2019-20 GDP growth forecast for India to 5.8 percent from 6.2 percent earlier, saying the economy was experiencing a pronounced slowdown which is partly related to long-lasting factors.

Moody’s had attributed the deceleration to an investment-led slowdown that has broadened into consumption, driven by financial stress among rural households and weak job creation and said the growth will pick up to 6.6 percent in 2020-21 and to around 7 percent over the medium term.

Last month, the Asian Development Bank and the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development lowered 2019-20 growth forecast for India by 50 basis points and 1.3 percentage points to 6.5 percent and 5.9 percent, respectively.

Rating agency Standard & Poor’s has also lowered its India growth forecast to 6.3 percent from 7.1 percent.

On Oct. 15, the International Monetary Fund slashed India’s GDP growth rate projections to 6.1 percent from the 7 percent in July, while World Bank had its estimate for India’s GDP growth for 2019-20 to 6 percent.

Fitch in a note on Indian economy said that assuming the sluggish pace of lending is maintained throughout the year, total new lending will amount to only 6.6 percent of GDP in the fiscal year 2019-2020, down from 9.5 percent in the previous fiscal year.

While an array of factors have contributed to the Indian slowdown - including a downturn in world trade, Fitch said that the severe credit squeeze has taken a heavy toll.

“NBFCs have faced a severe tightening of funding conditions over the past year and a half. They have in turn sharply reduced the supply of credit to the commercial sector. The auto and real estate sectors have been particularly hit by NBFC credit rationing,” it said.

Data from the RBI show that the flow of new lending from non-bank sources was down 60 percent year-on-year between April and September. In contrast, banks’ lending has held up well in recent months, mitigating some of the overall credit supply shortfall. However, bank lending could not prevent a sizeable credit crunch in the first half of 2019.

Fitch said the success of the inflation-targeting framework adopted by the RBI in 2016 in reducing inflation has been associated with sharply rising real lending interest rates since mid-2018.

“While the RBI has been able to lower interest rates, policy rate cuts have not been fully passed through to new rupee loans. As a result, inflation-adjusted (real) borrowing costs have increased, weighing on credit demand,” it said.

The lack of monetary policy transmission derives from the combination of high public-sponsored deposit rates against a backdrop of stretched banks’ balance sheets.

“Indeed, competition from public schemes, which offer more attractive deposit rates to customers, have made banks reluctant to cut deposit rates. Banks have maintained elevated lending rates to preserve their margins amid high funding costs,
it said. Fitch said the government has taken a string of policy measures over the past couple of months to shore up the economy and revive credit.

Opinion
IMF Sees India’s Economic Growth Rebounding To 7% Next Fiscal