Fulfil key reform promises for rating upgrade: S&P

‘India’s low income levels, weak fiscal and debt indicators constrain credit profile’

February 23, 2015 03:06 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 11:32 pm IST - MUMBAI

FILE - This Oct. 9, 2011 file photo shows 55 Water Street, home of Standard & Poor's, in New York. S&P said Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, the U.S. government is expected to file civil charges against Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, alleging that it improperly gave high ratings to mortgage debt that later plunged in value and helped fuel the 2008 financial crisis. The charges would mark the first enforcement action the government has taken against a major rating agency involving the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams, File)

FILE - This Oct. 9, 2011 file photo shows 55 Water Street, home of Standard & Poor's, in New York. S&P said Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, the U.S. government is expected to file civil charges against Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, alleging that it improperly gave high ratings to mortgage debt that later plunged in value and helped fuel the 2008 financial crisis. The charges would mark the first enforcement action the government has taken against a major rating agency involving the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams, File)

Days ahead of the Union Budget, global rating agency Standard & Poor’s, on Monday, warned that India’s weak fiscal and debt indicators, coupled with the low income levels, ‘constrain’ the sovereign rating.

“India’s low income levels and weak fiscal and debt indicators constrain the country’s credit profile,” S&P said in a note.

Although it said that last year’s election results have created conducive environment for reforms with political stability, the agency termed the ‘governance effectiveness’ as a ‘neutral credit factor’.

S&P said higher growth in real per capita GDP, stronger fiscal/debt metrics and an improved external position as well as monetary policy setting are essential to enhance the current ‘BBB’ rating with a stable outlook.

“The government’s ability to fulfil its promises on key reforms will, therefore, be critical,” S&P credit analyst Agost Benard said.

The government’s fiscal consolidation plan, which entails a gradual lowering of the fiscal deficit over the next three years, will ease the debt and interest burden but “improvements in India’s weak fiscal balance sheet are likely to be gradual,” he added.

The government has promised to keep the deficit at 4.1 per cent for 2014-15, and is targeting to bring it down to 3.6 per cent in 2015-16 and push it further to 3 per cent by 2016-17.

After comparing India with other BBB-rated peers like Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, the Philippines, South Africa and Uruguay, the agency said the average income in India is ‘significantly low’ and the ‘government is also more heavily indebted’.

“The country’s stronger external balance sheet only partly offsets these weaknesses,” it said. Flexibility on the monetary policy front, where the RBI has shifted to rate cuts, is ‘moderately supportive’ of the sovereign’s credit-worthiness, it said.

Factors such as high savings and investment rates, together with favourable demographics, where 87 per cent of the population is aged 54 or below, put the country in good stead to achieve fast growth.

Growth could touch the 7 per cent-mark by 2017, but a projected per capital income of $2,404 in 2017 will still leave the country’s wealth at about one-third of the average of similarly rated countries, it said. Commenting on strong performance on the external front, where some analysts are saying the current account could be in a surplus, the agency said this is unlikely to lead to an upward rating revision.

“We believe any further improvement in external liquidity or balance sheet is unlikely to lead to a higher credit rating,” it said.

The agency last year upgraded its outlook on the country to stable from negative.

It had earlier voiced concerns on the lack of growth, a sense of “policy paralysis” and the high fiscal deficit, and also threatened to downgrade the rating to junk.

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