City
Epaper

S&P Global Ratings retains India's GDP growth at 6.8 pc for FY25, cuts China's forecast

By IANS | Updated: September 24, 2024 13:30 IST

New Delhi, Sep 24 S&P Global Ratings on Tuesday retained India's growth forecast at 6.8 per cent for ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 24 S&P Global Ratings on Tuesday retained India's growth forecast at 6.8 per cent for the fiscal 2024-25, while reducing China's economic growth by 0.2 per cent to 4.6 per cent in the calendar year 2024.

In its quarterly economic outlook for the Asia-Pacific region, the global rating agency said, "In India, GDP growth moderated in the June quarter as high interest rates temper urban demand, in line with our projection of 6.8 for GDP for the full fiscal year 2024-2025."

India's solid growth allows the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to focus on bringing inflation in line with its target.

The rating agency also retained India's growth forecast for FY 2025-26 at 6.9 per cent. Meanwhile, S&P further reduced China's GDP growth to 4.3 per cent in the calendar year 2025.

The July budget confirmed that the government remains committed to fiscal consolidation and to keeping the focus of public expenditure on infrastructure.

In Budget 2024-25, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman allocated a total of Rs 11.11 lakh crore for capital expenditure. The central government also has set a target to bring down the fiscal deficit below 4.5 percent of GDP by FY 2025-26.

India will see a first-rate cut in October as Inflation is within RBI's target.

According to the report, "The RBI considers food inflation a hurdle for rate cuts. It reckons that unless there is a lasting and meaningful decline in the rate at which food prices are increasing it will be tough to maintain headline inflation at 4 per cent. Our outlook remains unchanged: we expect the RBI to begin cutting rates in October at the earliest and have penciled in two rate cuts this fiscal year (year ending March 2025)."

S&P reduced China's GDP growth forecast for 2024 to 4.6 per cent from 4.8 per cent. This reflects the country's sluggish property sector, weak domestic demand generally, and reluctance among policymakers to ease fiscal policy.

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

InternationalUS President Trump "saddened" by Joe Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis

International"Joe is a fighter": Kamala Harris expresses support for Joe Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis

International"Response to deliberate trade disruptions": Ex-High Commissioner Sikri on India's trade restrictions with Bangladesh

International"High time for India to be strict": Foreign Affairs Expert on India's trade restrictions to Bangladesh

InternationalFormer US President Biden diagnosed with "aggressive form" of prostate cancer

Business Realted Stories

BusinessFinance Commission visits Uttarakhand, developmental issues discussed

BusinessMeloni hosts trilateral talks between US & EU Amid Pope Leo XIV’s inaugural mass

BusinessCentre opens Soil Library to boost Maharashtra farm sector; Clean Plant Lab to be set up in Pune soon

BusinessIEA ranks India world’s largest market for electric 3-wheelers, above China

BusinessTripura: Foundation stone laid for Integrated Aqua Park, to scale up fish production