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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, September 10, 2001 |
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Growth pegged at 5.25 p.c.
By Sushma Ramachandran
NEW DELHI, SEPT. 9. In a mid-year review of the economy, the
Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) has projected a 5.25 per
cent growth for the current fiscal. This is even lower than the
revised 5.6 per cent forecast made by the National Council of
Applied Economic Research.
The forecast is made on the assumption that industrial growth
will remain around the three-per cent mark during the year with
services estimated at 6.5 per cent and agricultural output at a
``healthy'' 5 per cent. In addition, with half the year nearly
over and few reforms having taken place, there is little scope
for a pick-up during the rest of the year, the CII notes.
Even if agriculture performs well, its effect on industry through
a demand pull is lagged by four to six months. ``Therefore, we
don't expect a good monsoon-driven growth in the secondary sector
till the winter harvest, after January 2002.''
The CII also says the forecast can be proved ``delightfully
wrong'' if the Government refocuses itself and puts all its
energy in pushing and implementing reforms.
Outlining the scenario, it describes the outlook for foreign
investment as ``grim'' during 2001-2. The data for April and May
adds up to $449 billion indicating that India may not get more
than $2.7 billion to $3 billion as FDI.
During 2000-1, it managed to attract FDI worth just $2.3 billion
with even Vietnam expected to attract more. As for foreign
institutional investors (FIIs), the net inflows accounted for
$2.16 billion in 2000-1 while inflows during April-May this year
were $922 million.
This could increase in a big way, the CII says, if the Government
relaxes the 49 per cent cap on foreign portfolio investment and
frees it up altogether.
On the fiscal outlook, the ``State of the Economy'', says the
combined fiscal deficit of the Centre and States is rapidly
spinning out of control. The Centre's deficit for 2000-1 overshot
the target, and will probably be around 5.2 to 5.3 per cent of
the GDP the while the States' deficits aggregate five per cent.
Other ``off balance sheet'' items such as the oil pool deficit,
losses of State Electricity Boards and public sector losses borne
by banks and institutions lift the total deficit to over 11 per
cent of the GDP.
High forex reserves
On the plus side, there has been a steady growth of foreign
currency reserves, which stood at $44.1 billion as on August 10.
Regarding interest rates, the CII does not expect any hardening
in the near future, and in fact expects them to gradually move
southwards. India's real interest rates are among the highest in
the world, one of the reasons being that inflation has
consistently been under the six per cent mark.
On the need to revive the stock markets, the CII recommends that
instead of re-introducing badla in its old form, the Government
must quickly design a safe system for financing margin trading
which should not have the negative features of badla.
The Government should recognise that the ban on badla and
deferral systems, such as the automated lending and borrowing
mechanism at the National Stock Exchange and the borrowing and
lending securities scheme at the Bombay Stock Exchange, have led
to a liquidity crisis and a huge fall in trading volumes.
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