homeeconomy NewsIndia's near term fiscal deficit target higher than expected: Fitch

India's near-term fiscal deficit target higher than expected: Fitch

Fitch forecasts real GDP to rebound by 11 percent in FY22 (2021-22) and grow around 6.6 percent per annum through FY26. The government’s Economic Survey last week projected the economy to contract by a record 7.7 percent in the current fiscal.

By PTI Feb 2, 2021 2:17:16 PM IST (Published)


India’s fiscal deficit target in the near-term is higher than expected and medium-term consolidation is at a more gradual pace than anticipated, said Fitch Ratings in its comments on the just unveiled Union Budget for the financial year beginning April 1. India, which has often complained its sovereign credit ratings by agencies such as Fitch not reflecting the economy’s fundamentals, put the fiscal deficit – the excess of government expenditure over its revenues – at 9.5 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) in the current fiscal ending March 31, against a planned 3.5 percent.
For the next 2021-22 fiscal, the deficit was put at 6.8 percent of the GDP. ”Deficit targets presented in India’s central government budget on February 1 are higher, and medium-term consolidation more gradual, than we expected,” said Jeremy Zook, Director in Fitch Ratings’ Asia-Pacific Sovereigns team. Zook further noted that: ”We placed India’s ’BBB-’ rating on negative outlook in June 2020, in recognition of the pandemic’s impact on growth prospects and the challenges of the high public debt burden.” In the Budget for 2021-22, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiled a massive spending plan, which would be met partly from enhanced borrowings, to pull the economy out of the trough.
”The government’s prioritization of fiscal support for the population’s health and well-being, and ongoing economic recovery are understandable. At the same time, however, there is little fiscal space given India’s high public debt ratio prior to the virus shock (around 90 percent of GDP compared to the 53 percent 2020 ’BBB’ median),” he said. The budget, it said, forecasts wider near-term deficits and a more gradual pace of consolidation than anticipated, reaching 4.5 percent only by FY26.