There is scant downside risk to the Indian economy in the last months of this financial year from the Omicron coronavirus variant, according to economists polled by Reuters who said New Delhi should focus on fiscal prudence in its February budget.
Asia’s third-largest economy(Indian economy) is in the midst of a resurgence in coronavirus cases. Driven by the new variant that has forced most states to impose localised restrictions. The Jan. 11-18 poll of over 45 economists forecast 5.0% economic growth this quarter, a sharp downgrade from the 6.0% given in December, finishing the year at 9.2% compared with 9.5% in the previous month’s poll.
But nearly two-thirds of those responding to an additional question, 21 of 32. They said there was limit to downside to the outlook for the rest of this fiscal year which ends in March. Nine said it was at risk of downgrades, and two said it was prone to upgrades. The median growth projection for the next fiscal year was upgrade to 8.0% from 7.5% a month ago.
Scant downside risk to the Indian economy in the last month of this financial year from Omicron variant
The current phase of restrictions is not as harsh as it was during the previous waves. So, I think Omicron and the economic damage it inflicts is a Jan-March story. And it will only be limit to this fiscal year,” said Madhavi Arora, lead economist at Emkay Global Financial Services. Arora reckons the first quarter of the next financial year starting in April will get an extra boost once the third wave passes, assuming it does.
The latest poll also estimated economic growth at 14.7% for the same quarter. Inflation was expect to peak at 5.8% this quarter and then fall,. Remaining under the Reserve Bank of India’s 6.0% upper threshold until at least the end of fiscal 2023-24, taking pressure off the Bank for future interest rate rises.
India’s finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present the country’s 2022/2023 federal budget on Feb. 1, providing new targets for government spending, tax receipts, economic growth and fiscal deficits.