The government, experts say, is likely to continue with the off-budget route for carrying out infra-related spending.
Given
the slowdown in the economy and the possibility of oil prices moving
north over the next few months on the back of likely supply cuts by
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), market
experts expect the upcoming Union
Budget 2019 to focus on reviving growth and yet maintain fiscal
prudence.
That
apart, re-capitalisation of banks is also a key monitorable. The
government, they say, is likely to continue with the off-budget route
for carrying out infra-related spending.
“We
believe that the government will focus on maintaining continuity in
policy and spending on schemes allocated per the interim budget. As
such, we maintain our fiscal deficit estimate at 3.5 per cent of GDP
(3.4 per cent of GDP as per the interim budget), since the government
has introduced the farmer income support scheme and also recently
increased its scope,” wrote analysts at Morgan Stanley in a recent
co-authored report led by Ridham Desai, their India equity
strategist.
For
the January – March quarter, the gross domestic product (GDP) came
in at a dismal 5.8 per cent, sharply down from 6.6 per cent in the
previous quarter, well below forecasts and the slowest in over four
years.
Growth
expectations have also been trimmed. DBS, for instance, now pegs
India's FY20 GDP at 6.8 per cent on weakening exports, down from 7
per cent projected earlier. Fitch, too, has cut its expectation to
6.6 per cent for the current fiscal (6.8 per cent earlier).
“Beyond
the fiscal numbers, markets will also be looking for other details –
the credibility of tax revenue and growth assumptions, off-budget
expenditure, quality of spending and themes that are likely to be
championed by the recently re-elected government. The implication for
the fiscal and monetary policy mix is clear in our view. While there
is some space for monetary easing, there is no space for a higher
fiscal borrowing,” said Pranjul Bhandari, chief economist for India
at HBSC.
Markets,
however, have seen a good run over the past few months. In the first
half of calendar year 2019 (H1CY19), the S&P BSE Sensex and the
Nifty50
have gained around 9 per cent each. The S&P BSE Mid-cap and the
S&P BSE Small-cap indices have underperformed and have slipped
around 4 per cent and 3 per cent, respectively during this period.
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