India’s economy is an elephant that’s starting to run, says IMF

India’s economy is on track to hold its position as one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)

India is on track to hold its position as one of the world’s fastest-growing economies as reforms start to pay off, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The $2.6 trillion economy was described by Ranil Salgado, the IMF’s mission chief for India, as an elephant starting to run, with growth forecast at 7.3% in the fiscal year through March 2019 and 7.5% in the year after that. The nation accounts for about 15% of global growth, according to the Washington-based fund.
Key risks flagged by the IMF in its annual Article IV assessment of the economy include higher oil prices, tightening global financial conditions and tax revenue shortfalls. Authorities should take advantage of stronger growth to bring down debt levels, simplify the consumption tax system and continue to gradually tighten monetary policy, it said.
The International Monetary Fund has released the results of its annual assessment of the Indian economy, with predictions for 2018-19 and 2019-20. Here’s what the IMF numbers tell us:
(1) There’s no change in the forecast for India GDP growth—it remains 7.3% for the current fiscal year and 7.5% for 2019-20.
(2) The composition of this growth is interesting: gross investment as a percentage of GDP is projected to jump from 30.6% in FY18 to 32.2% this year. IMF clearly believes the long-awaited turnaround in investment demand is finally happening. Even so, note that the investment/GDP ratio was higher at 34.2% in 2014-15, when GDP growth was 7.4%. That indicates consumption will continue to be a driver of growth.
(3) The IMF predicts that growth in merchandise exports will be a strong 13.2% this fiscal year. If it occurs, this will be the highest rate of growth in exports since 2011-12. Perhaps the depreciation of the rupee may be a catalyst, but this is a bold call to make at a time of trade wars. Nevertheless that means, according to the IMF’s forecasts, all three engines of economic growth—consumption, investment and exports—will start firing from the current year.
(4) This increase in growth is expected to lead to a rise in consumer price inflation to an average of 5.2% this fiscal. That is well above the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) target of 4% and monetary policy can therefore be expected to be tight.
(5) Economic growth will lead to a rise in money supply, which is expected to go up by 11.4% this fiscal, a rate of growth not seen since 2013-14. A revival in bank credit to the private sector is expected—it’s projected to rise by 13.6% this year, also the highest rate of growth since 2013-14.
(6) Savings as a percentage of GDP is forecast to increase, but not to the same extent as investment. Indeed, the savings to GDP ratio this year is expected to be lower than in 2016-17, although it isn’t clear why. This imbalance between domestic savings and investment will result in a higher current account deficit, which the IMF estimates at 2.6% of GDP this fiscal year, up from 1.9% last year.
(7) One reason for the higher savings figure is that the IMF believes the general government fiscal deficit, including that of the states, will be 6.6% of GDP, compared to 7% last fiscal.
(8) The percentage growth in imports too is expected to be lower this year, but that is largely a base effect—import growth was negative in 2016-17.
(9) IMF thinks that foreign direct investment will rebound this year, after a drop last fiscal. But net portfolio inflows are expected to be much lower, which is not good news for the capital markets. There will probably be a small balance of payments deficit and foreign exchange reserves will be drawn down a bit.
(10) Having said all this, IMF emphasizes that “risks are tilted to the downside from external factors, such as higher global oil prices and tighter global financial conditions, as well as domestic financial vulnerabilities”.
How accurate have IMF predictions been in the past? In February 2017, during last year’s assessment, they said real GDP growth in 2016-17 would be 6.6% in 2016-17 and 7.2% in 2017-18. Growth turned out at 7.1% in 2016-17 and 6.7% last fiscal.
Their estimates of inflation were skewed to the upside. Their projections for investment were too optimistic. Their predictions of broad money growth were way off target and the less said about their estimates of portfolio flows the better.
This is not to take potshots at IMF’s prognoses, but to underline that all forecasts about an economy as complex as India’s should be taken with a pinch of salt.