City
Epaper

Central govt reforms in response to COVID-19 can raise India's medium-term growth rate: Fitch Ratings

By ANI | Updated: November 20, 2020 16:19 IST

Revival of the central government's reform agenda in response to the coronavirus pandemic shock has the potential to raise India's medium-term growth rate, said Fitch Ratings on Friday.

Open in App

Revival of the central government's reform agenda in response to the coronavirus pandemic shock has the potential to raise India's medium-term growth rate, said Fitch Ratings on Friday.

In a report titled -- India's reforms could support medium-term growth -- Fitch Ratings suggested there will be downside pressures to growth and said the process of reform in India "remained especially complex and implementation at times proved difficult".

"Raising medium-term growth rates under these circumstances will require reforms to support investment and boost productivity," the report stated, adding that it will take time to assess whether the reforms are implemented effectively.

It said several reforms passed by the parliament since the pandemic set in which could lift medium-term growth prospects. The report noted that the agricultural reforms announced by the parliament could give more flexibility to the farmers to sell their produce.

"The agricultural reforms brought by the parliament to give farmers more flexibility to sell their produce is notable. Stripping out middlemen, as the reform allows, could improve farmer incomes while reducing consumer prices," it stated.

Commenting on the labour reforms introduced by the government, the report stated: "Their intent, among other things, is to improve worker access to social security, strengthen occupational safety requirements, speed up the resolution of labour disputes and ease migrant workers' ability to move between states. In addition, employers will now only need prior state government approval for redundancies if they have over 300 workers, up from 100 previously and state governments may raise this threshold."

"These changes could support the formalisation of India's labour market and improve its flexibility, with positive efficiency gains, but our assumption is that in practice their impact will be modest," the report read.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

National"Resolve of double-engine govt": Yogi Adityanath ahead of land ownership rights documents distribution in Lakhimpur Kheri

National"Women's Reservation Bill should be implemented at earliest": Padma Shri Sunita Godbole

Other SportsIPL 2026: I try to play the ball, not the bowler, says Sooryavanshi on facing Bhuvneshwar, Hazlewood and Bumrah

EntertainmentKarisma Kapoor returns to judge ‘India’s Best Dancer 5’: Will define the best in new way

NationalDelhi Police arrest 14 in mule account cyber fraud racket; cash, mobiles, ATM cards recovered

Business Realted Stories

BusinessS. Korea to roll out cash aid late this month amid Middle East crisis

BusinessSEBI launches three new IT platforms to transform regulatory landscape

BusinessNSE to attain nanosecond order delivery acknowledgement across currency, commodity, cash, and equity derivatives segments

BusinessCommerce Ministry, Ports Department review packaging and shipping challenges amid West Asia crisis

BusinessTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave