India's Pace Of Growth Will Accelerate In 2018-19, Says RBI Governor

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
India (RBI) Governor Urjit Patel has said the country's growth is expected to accelerate next fiscal.Mr Patel was addressing the
International Monetary Finance Committee here yesterday."The Indian economy turned in a resilient performance in 2017-18," Mr Patel
said.Although the real GDP growth was moderated to 6.6 per cent from 7.1 per cent a year ago, there was a strong rebound in the second half
of the year on the back of a turnaround in investment demand, he said.This was supported by an acceleration in manufacturing, rising sales
growth, a pick-up in capacity utilisation, strong activity in the services sector and a record agricultural harvest, the RBI governor
added."Several factors are expected to help accelerate the pace of growth in 2018-19
There are now clearer signs that the revival in investment activity will be sustained," he said.Global demand has been improving, which
should encourage exports and boost fresh investments, Patel said, adding that on the whole, real GDP growth was expected to expand at 7.4
per cent in 2018-19, with risks evenly balanced.In his address, Mr Patel said since November 2016, headline consumer price inflation had
generally remained below the medium-term target of four per cent.An unusual spike in vegetables prices pushed up inflation to a recent peak
of 5.2 per cent in December, but it eased in subsequent months to reach 4.3 per cent in March, he said.Mr Patel said several factors were
likely to influence the inflation outlook, including a possible moderation in food prices if the monsoon turned out to be normal and was
supported by an effective food supply management."Countervailing this, upside risks emanate from the distinct hardening bias in crude oil
prices, the steady firming up of inflation excluding food and fuel mirroring pick up in domestic demand, and spillovers from financial
volatility as markets re-price the path of monetary policy normalisation by systemic central banks," he said.Noting that risks to inflation
are tilted to the upside, the monetary policy rate was kept unchanged at 6.0 per cent in April 2018 with a neutral stance, Mr Patel
said.Asserting that the government is committed to fiscal prudence, the RBI governor said aided by buoyancy in tax revenues and
rationalisation of subsidies, the gross fiscal deficit (GFD) of the central government has been steadily brought down since 2013-14 to 3.5
per cent of GDP in 2017-18 without compromising on public investment requirements and social sector spending.The GFD is budgeted lower at
3.3 per cent in 2018-19, he said
The government has accepted a debt rule that will bring down the debt-to-GDP ratio to 40 per cent over a period of time by 2024-25.Mr Patel
said the goods and services tax (GST), which was implemented from July 2017 has reformed the system of indirect taxes by simplifying
payments and credits, and improving the efficiency of movement of goods across the country.Automation of tax payments and 'team-based
assessment with dynamic jurisdiction' without direct interface with tax payers has improved overall efficiency and transparency of revenue
administration, he said.Mr Patel said with the pace of import growth relative to that of exports, the current account deficit (CAD) expanded
from 0.7 per cent in 2016-17 to 1.9 per cent for the first nine months of 2017-18.External financing conditions remained comfortable,
boosted mainly by robust inflows of foreign direct investment (FDI), he said.The UNCTAD's survey of multinational enterprises ranked India
as the third most favoured destination for FDI for 2017-19
Reflecting these developments, India's foreign exchange reserves at $424 billion were equivalent of 11 months of imports, he added."India
has persevered with structural reforms over a wide area ranging from a flexible inflation targeting framework for monetary policy;
liberalisation of FDI flows; a unique identification (Aadhaar) backed direct benefit transfers; an insolvency and bankruptcy code; the GST;
realty reforms; and a swathe of measures for improvement in the ease of doing business more generally," he said.These factors have improved
India's global ranking in the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business, Mr Patel added.