Fiscal metrics to stay weak on COVID: S&P

‘FY22 GDP impact may be 100-300 bps’

May 05, 2021 12:12 am | Updated 12:12 am IST - Mumbai

Chennai, 11/05/2020 : A girl reaching out to her favourite product at a fancy store in T.Nagar on Monday. The Tamil Nadu announced on Saturday the easing of a host of restrictions beginning May 11, allowing thirtythree percent workforce to return to small time business and offices in Chennai, all day petrol pumps on state and central highways and opening of essential services and few tea-shops (except those in containment zones) across the state along with standalone and neighbourhood shops are allowed to function from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Photo : S. R. Raghunathan

Chennai, 11/05/2020 : A girl reaching out to her favourite product at a fancy store in T.Nagar on Monday. The Tamil Nadu announced on Saturday the easing of a host of restrictions beginning May 11, allowing thirtythree percent workforce to return to small time business and offices in Chennai, all day petrol pumps on state and central highways and opening of essential services and few tea-shops (except those in containment zones) across the state along with standalone and neighbourhood shops are allowed to function from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Photo : S. R. Raghunathan

An ongoing second wave of COVID-19 infections in India could hurt its near-term economic recovery and possibly diminish growth for the full year, S&P Global Ratings said on Tuesday.

“India’s COVID wave will inevitably hit the recovery and could push growth below 10%,” said Shaun Roache, chief economist, Asia Pacific at S&P.

“The longer it takes to regain control, the greater the permanent damage, especially as policy space is limited.”

With 3.45 million active cases, India recorded 357,229 new infections over the last 24 hours, while deaths rose 3,449 for a toll of 222,408, health ministry data showed. Experts said actual numbers could be five to 10 times higher.

‘Q1 shock to spill over’

S&P currently has a “BBB-” rating on India with a stable outlook, the lowest investment grade and expects India’s economy to grow 11% in the year that started April 1 following a projected record contraction of 8% in the previous year.

“The shock of the first quarter is likely to carry on through the rest of the year and the impact on the GDP could be around one to three percentage points,” Mr. Roache said. (1 percentage point = 100 basis points or bps). The rating agency said India had been showing strong recovery momentum since September last year and until March-April of 2021 before the massive surge in cases prompted localised lockdowns and mobility restrictions.

“There will be some near-term ramifications at least... from the severe second wave of COVID-19 that we are observing. But India still has good recovery prospects over the next 3-4 years but that may be slower,” Andrew Wood, director, sovereign & international public finance ratings.

He said that the agency expected India to see the best growth prospects over the medium to longer-term, relative to other regional peers at similar development levels.

“We still believe that India’s fiscal settings are going to be weak... deficits are going to be high for a long time,” Mr. Wood said. India’s general fiscal deficit is seen at around 11% of GDP this year against 14% last year, he added.

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