Mumbai, Jan 11: Domestic rating agency Icra Ratings on Monday said it expects the country's real gross domestic product (GDP) to grow by 10.1 per cent in 2021-22.
It, however, said the value of GDP in the next financial year will only mildly surpass the level that had been recorded in 2019-20.
“After a 7.8 per cent pandemic-driven shrinkage in the ongoing fiscal (2020-21), India's real GDP is projected to record a growth of 10.1 per cent in 2021-22. The seemingly-sharp expansion will be led by the continued normalisation in economic activities as the roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines gathers traction, as well as the low base,” the agency principal economist Aditi Nayar said in a report.
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The agency's principal economist expects a multi-speed recovery in 2021-22, with the contact-intensive sectors, discretionary consumption and investment by the private sector trailing the rest of the economy, in the arduous march back to attaining, and sustaining, pre-COVID levels.
“On a sobering note, we project the aggregate value of the Indian GDP in real terms in 2021-22, to be only mildly higher than the level recorded in 2019-20,” Nayar added.
The agency expects the headline CPI inflation to decline to 4.6 per cent in 2021-22 from 6.4 per cent in 2020-21, while exceeding the mid-point of the Monetary Policy Committee's (MPC's) medium target of 4 per cent, for the third consecutive year.
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A favourable base would moderate the retail food inflation to an average of 4.7 per cent in 2021-22 from 8 per cent in 2020-21, despite the pressures from edible oils, and protein items such as pulses, it said.
With the CPI inflation expected to remain above the MPC's 4 per cent target during 2021-22, the agency expects an extended pause for the repo rate.
It expects the “stance of monetary policy to be changed to neutral from accommodative in the August 2021 policy review or later, only after there is greater certainty on the durability of the awaited economic revival.”
The report said RBI may initiate steps, in a calibrated manner, to reduce the magnitude of the systemic liquidity surplus.
Nayar said the government security yields will take a cue from the size of the borrowing programme of the central and the state governments for 2021-22, as well as the outlook for inflation.
The agency expects the twin deficits to display a divergent trend in 2021-22.
“As the revenue shock ebbs, we project India's general government (centre + states) fiscal deficit to moderate to 8.5 per cent of GDP in 2021-22 from the 12-12.5 per cent of the GDP expected in the current year,” Nayar said.
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However, with imports expected to revive in tune with the anticipated recovery in domestic demand, the current account balance is forecast to slip back into a modest deficit of $15-20 billion (or 0.6 per cent of GDP) in 2021-22 from a surplus of $35-40 billion in 2020-21, she said.