India To See Slow Recovery Amid Global Woes, Rate Cut Delays: BofA-MLc


New Delhi: Indian economy is likely to witness a slow recovery largely due delay in two factors – global revival and lending rate cuts at the domestic front, says a Bank of America Merrill lynch report.

According to the global financial services major, notwithstanding a far more politically stronger government, recovery in the Indian economy would be driven by global turnaround.

“We continue to caution investors about a slow recovery due to twin delays in global recovery as well as lending rate cuts at home,” BofA-ML said in a research note.

The recovery in Indian economy is likely to be driven by a pick-up in consumption in the next 12 months, it added.

The global brokerage firm said that the coming months could see a consumption recovery largely driven by four factors – softer lending rates, public sector salary hikes after the 7th Pay Commission, household savings on lower oil prices and a possible hike in wheat MSP before the early-2017 Punjab/UP polls.

The report noted that lending rate cuts rather than reforms will drive cyclical recovery as reforms typically take 5-10 years to push up growth structurally.

Meanwhile, BofA-ML has also trimmed its growth forecast for India to 5.5 pct from 6 pct for the current fiscal, as per the old GDP series.

According to the old series, the base year for calculation of national accounts was 2004-05.

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has now adopted the new series of National Accounts with 2011-12 as base year and subsequently revised the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate to 6.9 pct in 2013-14 from 4.7 pct and 5.1 pct in 2012-13 from 4.5 pct.

The April-June quarter GDP slipped to 7 pct from 7.5 pct in the preceding quarter.

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Source: PTI