INTERVIEW - Deficit, inflation seen threatening India's recovery
By Rajesh Kumar Singh
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A high fiscal deficit and rising inflationary pressure could derail India's economic recovery, an advisor to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday.
A string of fiscal stimulus measures to revive the economy along with lower revenues in a slowing economy have hurt India's finances, with the fiscal deficit projected to rise to 6.8 percent of GDP in the year through March 2010, a 16-year high, compared with 6.2 percent in the previous year.
"Fiscal deficit is one cause for concern. We don't have that much room on the fiscal side," Raghuram Rajan told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of a World Economic Forum.
To fund its record deficit the government has resorted to record borrowing of 4.51 trillion rupees ($96.4 billion) during the current fiscal year, which some market-watchers have said could crowd out private borrowers.
The government has laid a roadmap to bring down the deficit to 5.5 percent of GDP in 2010-11, and to 4 percent in 2011-12.
"I think it's an ambitious goal but it is appropriate that we should think about bringing it there, because we need to bring down our public debt to levels which are better than where they are now," said Rajan, former chief economist at the World Economic Forum.
He said a lower deficit would also enable India to manage unforseen situations, as the global economy remained volatile.
Last week the government announced plans to sell stakes in all profitable state-run companies to the public to help bridge its deficit. A government report in July said 250 billion rupees could be raised selling stakes in state-run firms. Continued...
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