Market Pulse

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

REUTERS SHOWCASE

AirAsia  in India

AirAsia in India

AirAsia India launch seen in Q4; may order 50 more Airbus jets: CEO.  Full Article 

Jet, Spicejet Results

Jet, Spicejet Results

Jet Airways, SpiceJet report quarterly losses.  Full Article | Related Story 

Tata Steel Shines

Tata Steel Shines

Tata Steel surges; Q4 operating profit beats f'cast.  Full Article 

Gold Outlook

Gold Outlook

Gold faces more pressure as inflation stays tame.  Full Article 

RBI's May Review

RBI's May Review

Subbarao overrules panel view on rate action in May.  Full Article 

Steel Output

Steel Output

Jindal to expand steel output, buy mines in West Africa.  Full Article 

Abe's Agenda

Abe's Agenda

Special Report - The deeper agenda behind "Abenomics".  Full Article 

Revenge of Markets

Revenge of Markets

For months, markets have been dancing to central bankers' tune, but that may now be changing, writes James Saft.  Full Article 

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Confused while buying stocks? Get buy, sell or hold recommendations from VantageTrade.  Full Coverage 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Budget 'realistic', positive for ratings: Moody's

Related Topics

1 of 3. An Indian national flag flutters on top of the Indian parliament building in New Delhi December 1, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/B Mathur/Files

MUMBAI | Mon Mar 4, 2013 1:58pm IST

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India's budget for the next fiscal year offers a "realistic" plan to meet the country's fiscal deficit target, and should be a credit positive for its sovereign ratings, Moody's Investor's Service said in a report on Monday.

India's fiscal consolidation plans could pave the way for monetary easing, thus helping revive economic growth, Moody's also said about the budget unveiled last week.

Still, the credit agency noted India would continue to find it challenging to meet some of the assumptions about growth, as well as revenue and spending, made in the budget.

Moody's is the only one of the three major credit agencies, to have a "stable" outlook on India's ratings after Standard & Poor's and Fitch cut the outlook to "negative" last year.

"This plan of modest fiscal consolidation is credit positive for the sovereign because against a backdrop of subdued GDP growth and upcoming elections, it is a realistic effort to correct India's macroeconomic imbalances," Moody's said.

India unveiled a 2013/14 budget on Thursday that seeks to meet its fiscal deficit target of 4.8 percent of gross domestic product by raising revenue to fund a dash for growth ahead of elections due by next year.

Moody's said India's "sharp" spending cuts helped it reduce its fiscal deficit for the current financial year ending in March to 5.2 percent of GDP, and it will need to show the same commitment for the coming fiscal year.

(Budget special coverage, click here)

The credit agency said the 4.8 percent deficit target should have suggested a more aggressive fiscal consolidation effort than the one unveiled on Thursday, but added that would have been unrealistic.

"An aggressive fiscal consolidation effort would have been difficult to achieve given that low incomes significantly constrain the government's revenue base and necessitate social expenditures," Moody's added.

Still, the agency warned the budget's assumptions were still "optimistic," adding that "achieving such targets will be challenging."

Moody's said India has usually raised less money from selling stakes in public companies than first targeted, while GDP growth, tax revenue and spending on subsidies have tended to overshoot budget targets in the past seven years. (Reporting by Rafael Nam and Shamik Paul; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.