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Moody’s projects India’s Nominal GDP Growth of 17% for next fiscal.

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Moody’s projects nominal growth of 17% for next fiscal
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Moody’s projects nominal growth of 17% for next fiscal year.

NEW DELHI: Global rating agency Moody’s projected India’s nominal growth at 17% for the coming fiscal, a mark up from the 14.3% earlier, based on the “pro-growth” budget, but highlighted the weak prospects of fiscal consolidation.

“The budget's focus on higher capital expenditure, financial sector reforms and asset sales will help to stimulate growth and supply broad-based credit support,” it said in a report on Wednesday.

The larger-than-expected deficit projections reflected both credible budgetary assumptions and greater transparency, but the government's weak fiscal position is likely to remain a key credit challenge, Moody’s said.

The Union Budget, presented by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Monday, forecast nominal gross domestic product (GDP) growth at 14.4%.

The agency had pegged India’s fiscal deficit for the current fiscal at 7.5% of GDP and 5.5% for the next fiscal,
while the budget put the figures at 9.5% and 6.8% for FY21 and FY22, respectively

“However, compared with previous budgets, the gap between our forecasts and the government's, largely reflects increased transparency on subsidy spending and more credible overall assumptions,” the report said, adding that it expects the final figure to be lower based on stronger revenue generation during the fourth quarter of FY21.

In terms of the consolidation roadmap, without providing the explicit path, the targeted deficit of 4.5% by FY26 implied an average annual deficit reduction of about 0.5% of GDP over four years.

Combined with the expected rise in debt burden to over 90% in the ongoing fiscal, the “gradual pace of consolidation will prevent any material strengthening in the government's fiscal position over the medium term,” Moody’s said.


The agency counted the opening up of the insurance sector to 74% foreign direct investment from 49% as a credit positive and said achieving the disinvestment target of Rs 1.75 lakh crore would be key to achieving other budget targets.





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State of Economy Far Worse than Govt Admits, GDP Will Shrink 29% This Year - Economist Arun Kumar
Must be a hell of a guy, to contradict both IMF and Moody's.
Moody’s projects nominal growth of 17% for next fiscal
1612456258318.jpeg

SECTIONS
Moody’s projects nominal growth of 17% for next fiscal year.

NEW DELHI: Global rating agency Moody’s projected India’s nominal growth at 17% for the coming fiscal, a mark up from the 14.3% earlier, based on the “pro-growth” budget, but highlighted the weak prospects of fiscal consolidation.

“The budget's focus on higher capital expenditure, financial sector reforms and asset sales will help to stimulate growth and supply broad-based credit support,” it said in a report on Wednesday.

The larger-than-expected deficit projections reflected both credible budgetary assumptions and greater transparency, but the government's weak fiscal position is likely to remain a key credit challenge, Moody’s said.

The Union Budget, presented by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Monday, forecast nominal gross domestic product (GDP) growth at 14.4%.

The agency had pegged India’s fiscal deficit for the current fiscal at 7.5% of GDP and 5.5% for the next fiscal,
while the budget put the figures at 9.5% and 6.8% for FY21 and FY22, respectively

“However, compared with previous budgets, the gap between our forecasts and the government's, largely reflects increased transparency on subsidy spending and more credible overall assumptions,” the report said, adding that it expects the final figure to be lower based on stronger revenue generation during the fourth quarter of FY21.

In terms of the consolidation roadmap, without providing the explicit path, the targeted deficit of 4.5% by FY26 implied an average annual deficit reduction of about 0.5% of GDP over four years.

Combined with the expected rise in debt burden to over 90% in the ongoing fiscal, the “gradual pace of consolidation will prevent any material strengthening in the government's fiscal position over the medium term,” Moody’s said.


The agency counted the opening up of the insurance sector to 74% foreign direct investment from 49% as a credit positive and said achieving the disinvestment target of Rs 1.75 lakh crore would be key to achieving other budget targets.
Moody needs to increase India's sovereign rating. We are not going to default on our commitments like that and yet we are on the lower scale.
 
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Must be a hell of a guy, to contradict both IMF and Moody's.

Moody needs to increase India's sovereign rating. We are not going to default on our commitments like that and yet we are on the lower scale.
Butthurts come first for trolling purposes, if they see anything positive about India, they will search for negative articles containing opinions of random roadside guys saying anything, does he even know how much is 29% and who is Arun Kumar?
Yes he is a Congressi desh drohi, and a Libtard as well.
Lol, did it happen? Almost 7.7% was reported to be contraction of Indian economy in FY2020-21. Now cry me a river.
Must be a hell of a guy, to contradict both IMF and Moody's.

Moody needs to increase India's sovereign rating. We are not going to default on our commitments like that and yet we are on the lower scale.
Couldn’t get your last.
 
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Lol, did it happen? Almost 7.7% was reported to be contraction of Indian economy in FY2020-21. Now cry me a river.


Yes the contraction decreased from 9.5% to 7.7% and for the next fiscal it increased from 7.5% to 17% in the positive. No bigger economy has ever achieved a growth of 17% in the last many decades.

Indian economy may contract by 9.6% in 2020, grow at 7.3% in 2021: UN. ... According to the fiscal year estimates released in the report, India's economy is estimated to decline by 5.7 per cent in 2020 and will return to a 7 per cent growth rate in fiscal year 2021, slowing down again to 5.6 per cent in 2022.

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Yes the contraction decreased from 9.5% to 7.7% and for the next fiscal it increased from 7.5% to 17% in the positive. No bigger economy has ever achieved a growth of 17% in the last many decades.

Indian economy may contract by 9.6% in 2020, grow at 7.3% in 2021: UN. ... According to the fiscal year estimates released in the report, India's economy is estimated to decline by 5.7 per cent in 2020 and will return to a 7 per cent growth rate in fiscal year 2021, slowing down again to 5.6 per cent in 2022.
Have you ever heard of Base level effect, plus this is Nominal growth.
 
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GDP was touching $3 trlllion in Early 2020 or late 2019.
Covid caused a GDP contraction around 10% ie down to $2.7 trillion in late 2020.
As india comes out with vaccines and the reopens i suspect 7 to 8% growth this year OR back to $3 trillion by Dec 2021.

Its swings and roundabouts

I im not sute about 17% growth in one year thst would add over $500 billion in one year even covid bounceback standards its way too high
 
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Yes the contraction decreased from 9.5% to 7.7% and for the next fiscal it increased from 7.5% to 17% in the positive. No bigger economy has ever achieved a growth of 17% in the last many decades.

Indian economy may contract by 9.6% in 2020, grow at 7.3% in 2021: UN. ... According to the fiscal year estimates released in the report, India's economy is estimated to decline by 5.7 per cent in 2020 and will return to a 7 per cent growth rate in fiscal year 2021, slowing down again to 5.6 per cent in 2022.

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This would have been relevent for reference but India’s own economic survey conducted on 2nd February (day before yesterday) said that India’s Real GDP contracted by 7.7% in FY2020-21 and will grow at 11% in FY2021-22.
*7.7%
 
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Have you ever heard of Base level effect, plus this is Nominal growth.


Even with a base level calculations this is too far fetched...17% will take some huge doing.

And seen with Indian exports almost stagnant since 2011...hardly a 10% plus/minus in these 9 years.

Also what are the drivers of growth???

Looking at the world economy in contraction still, farmers protest not sorted out, worst joblessness.

Many a times a very ambitious target is counter productive...except that it results in chest thumping for the govt.
 
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GDP was touching $3 trlllion in Early 2020 or late 2019.
Covid caused a GDP contraction around 10% ie down to $2.7 trillion in late 2020.
As india comes out with vaccines and the reopens i suspect 7 to 8% growth this year OR back to $3 trillion by Dec 2021.

Its swings and roundabouts

I im not sute about 17% growth in one year thst would add over $500 billion in one year even covid bounceback standards its way too high
You are intermixing everything, first of all India’s economy will contract 7.7%, 2nd 17% is the Nominal Growth rate.
Even with a base level calculations this is too far fetched...17% will take some huge doing.

And seen with Indian exports almost stagnant since 2011...hardly a 10% plus/minus in these 9 years.

Also what are the drivers of growth???

Looking at the world economy in contraction still, farmers protest not sorted out, worst joblessness.

Many a time a very ambitious target is counter productive...except that it results in chest thumping for the govt.
We don’t have a manufacturing base, now after government’s PLI schemes and many more PLI schemes, we are making India a manufacturing powerhouse, and many world class infrastructure projects are under construction in India.
 
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and many world class infrastructure projects are under construction in India.


Most of the spending on infra must be from the Indian govt....yes it increases the GDP, manufacturing base of India is about 12-14% of China, so still very low. Exports too, China exports are in excess of 2500 Billion USD last year. India's was about...

Overall Exports and Imports for India 2018
  • The total value of exports (FOB) is US$ 322,292 million(322 billion USD).
  • The total value of imports (CIF) is US$ 617,946 million.
 
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Couldn’t get your last.
Moody recently downgraded India's sovereign rating to just above Junk. It effectively makes borrowings expensive, we are not a fragile economy and haven't had a bailout in around 30 years. And yet we are in one of the lowest credit-rated countries. Government has been propping up forex for exactly that purpose, in the hopes that credit agencies improve our ratings, also, added advantage of FII investment who feel more secure to invest in the hopes they would get short term or long term return without huge swings in forex that triggers RBI intervention.
 
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