During Q3 of 2011, global growth
prospects further deteriorated, which may have
an adverse impact on the Indian economy. The
intensity of the impact will depend on how deep
is the global downturn which, in turn, is related
to how the current and future financial stress
in global markets are addressed. In a baseline
scenario, growth in India in 2011-12 is likely
to be somewhat below trend.
2. Inflationary pressures are strong and
persistent due to structural rigidities,
continuing strong demand and the adaptive
nature of inflation expectations. The path of
inflation is sticky and remains broadly in line
with earlier projections. With falling global
commodity prices partly offset by rupee
depreciation, the risks to inflation projections
are now balanced.
3. Monetary policy has been tightened
considerably with an effective 500 bps rate hike
cumulatively and a 100 bps reserve requirement
increase in a span of 20 months since February
2010. Monetary transmission has helped raise
deposit and lending rates, correct the mismatch
between deposit and credit growth and dampen
aggregate demand. Though the risks to growth
are becoming visible, the challenge of bringing
down inflation to an acceptable level on a
sustainable basis still remains significant.
Global Economic Conditions
Global growth risks intensify as debt crisis
erodes confidence
4. Global growth prospects appear to be
declining, even though recovery has not stalled.
There have been significant downward revisions in growth projections for the advanced
economies. Risks to global growth have
amplified with business and consumer
confidence dampening on the back of the
deepening sovereign debt crisis in Europe.
Private sector balance sheets are at risk and
significant banking sector weakness is reemerging
as a result. Importantly, financial
stress could extend beyond euro area
boundaries. If the euro area slows down further,
as currently expected, it may have a domino
effect on the global economy with spillovers to
emerging markets.
5. In its World Economic Outlook of
September 2011, the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) significantly lowered its global
growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points for
2011 and 0.5 percentage points for 2012. The
world economy is still expected to grow at 4.0
per cent in both these years. The cuts in growth
projections were deeper for advanced
economies (AEs), but were also pervasive
among emerging and developing economies
(EDEs). The IMF also lowered its growth
forecast for India. Its current projections of 7.8
per cent for 2011 and 7.5 per cent for 2012 in
market prices correspond to a projection of 7.6
per cent growth at factor cost for 2011-12 and
2012-13.
Global commodity prices softening, but
consumer inflation persists
6. Global commodity prices, especially those
of metals, have softened significantly. However,
even after some correction, the current Brent
crude oil price is still over 25 per cent higher
than its average for 2010-11. The IMF has revised upwards its consumer price inflation
forecast for EDEs by 0.6 percentage point to
7.5 per cent for 2011, while leaving the
projection for AEs unchanged at 2.6 per cent.
7. The global inflation path remains unclear.
A strong softening bias has been induced in by
the impending global slowdown. Producers’
pricing power remains low in AEs. Wage
inflation is also likely to be restrained as
unemployment still remains a significant
challenge in these economies. However, this is
counterbalanced by inflation persistence in
EDEs backed by demand conditions. Also, there
are upside risk to global commodity prices
stemming from excessively accommodative
monetary policy stance in AEs.
Indian Economy: Developments and
Outlook
Output
Growth moderating below trend in
2011-12
8. Growth in 2011-12 is likely to moderate
to below trend. Agriculture prospects remain
encouraging with the likelihood of a record
Kharif crop. However, moderation is visible in
industrial activity and some services, mainly
construction and community, social and
personal services. Given the linkage of domestic
industrial growth with global cycle, some
further moderation is likely ahead given the
weak global PMIs. Capacity constraints seem
to be easing in some manufacturing activity,
especially cement, fertilizers and steel.
Construction activity has slowed and leading
indicators suggest that services growth may
slightly weaken ahead.
Aggregate demand
Investment slowdown may impact growth
ahead
9. Indications are that investment demand is
softening as a result of combination of factors
including monetary tightening, hindrances to
project execution and deteriorating business
confidence. Planned corporate fixed investment in new projects declined significantly since the
second half of 2010-11. Consequently, the
pipeline of investment is likely to shrink, putting
2012-13 growth at risk. Private consumption is
also starting to soften in parts, but it still
remains robust as is evident from corporate
sales performance. There are also risks to
demand management if government
consumption spending overshoots budget
estimates. As such, a key to growth
sustainability lies in supporting investment by
rebalancing demand from government
consumption to public and private investment.
External sector
Widening CAD poses risk if global trade
and capital flows shrink
10. The Current Account Deficit (CAD)
widened in Q1 of 2011-12. Exports are expected
to decelerate in H2 of 2011-12. If global
financial market stress increases further and
affects capital flows to the emerging markets,
financing of CAD could pose a challenge. The
Indian rupee has seen significant nominal and
real depreciation in Q2 of 2011-12. However,
this trend has been in line with that of other
emerging market currencies, which too
depreciated significantly as US dollar
appreciated with flight to safety amidst rising
risk aversion.
Monetary and Liquidity Conditions
Liquidity conditions remain comfortable,
credit growth stays above trajectory
11. Though during Q2 of 2011-12, liquidity
conditions remained in deficit mode in line with
the policy objective, it remained comfortable.
Base money has decelerated as currency growth
moderated. Money (M3) growth, however,
moderated less sharply as the money multiplier
increased. Bank credit growth is also presently
above the indicative trajectory. This has been
supplemented by increased resource flows from
non-banking sources. Going forward, credit
growth is expected to moderate as growth
slows down. Monetary transmission is still
unfolding in response to significant monetary tightening since February 2010. However, real
interest rates are still low and supportive of
growth.
Financial Markets
Spillovers contained in domestic equity
and currency markets as risk aversion and
volatility is back in global markets
12. The US sovereign rating downgrade and
the deteriorating sovereign debt situation in the
euro area caused significant pressures in global
financial markets during Q2 of 2011-12. Rising
risk aversion caused credit spreads to widen,
and most markets experienced increased
volatility. Volatility spillovers impacted
domestic equity and currency markets, but were
contained by providing adequate rupee and
forex liquidity. Rupee depreciation and the fall
in equity indices in Q2 of 2011-12 were
comparable to the patterns in most other
emerging markets. Money market rates
remained in line with policy signals, while
G-sec yields hardened after the announcement
of additional market borrowing.
Price Situation
High inflation likely to persist in near-term
before moderating as falling global
commodity prices provide limited comfort
13. Upside risks to inflation persist in EDEs
which have experienced elevated inflation for
more than a year. Global commodity prices have
eased, but the levels remain high, especially for
crude oil. Financialisation of commodities has
made the future commodity price path
uncertain. With incomplete pass-through of the earlier rise in global commodity prices, the
favorable impact, arising from the transmission
of falling global commodity prices is also likely
to be limited. Moreover, the benefit from the
recent fall in global oil prices has been offset
by rupee depreciation. Domestic price pressures
still remain significant and broad-based. Food
price inflation remains high as a result of
structural mismatches in non-cereal primary
food articles and large MSP revisions. Real
wage inflation has been significant in 2010-11
and the wedge between wage inflation and CPI
inflation has increased further in Q1 of 2011-
12. In sum, the inflation challenge remains
significant.
Macroeconomic Outlook
Growth risks amplify while sticky inflation
makes policy choices difficult
14. Growth risks have increased on account
of global headwinds and domestic factors. The
baseline inflation path still remains sticky and
broadly unchanged from earlier projections.
This has made policy choices more complex.
Some sacrifice of growth is inevitable in the
current milieu of high inflation. On the current
assessment the growth in 2011-12 is likely to
moderate slightly from that projected earlier.
Various surveys conducted suggest that business
expectations have suffered, while inflation
expectations remain high. At the same time
inflation risk persists. In this backdrop, the
monetary policy trajectory will need to be
guided by the emerging growth-inflation
dynamics even as transmission of the past
actions is still unfolding. |