India's fiscal deficit may widen to 3.5% in FY19: Morgan Stanley report

Even though spending growth is expected to accelerate, Morgan Stanley's base case is that it does not expect a material impact on the inflation outlook

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Taming fiscal deficit at 3.2% of GDP is a tall order

India's is expected to increase to 3.5 per cent of in 2018-19 but it will not have any material impact on macro stability risks, says a Morgan Stanley report. As per the report, target may widen to 3.5 per cent of in 2018-19 from 3.4 per cent in 2017-18.

However, "the mix will still be favourable and hence we don't expect macro stability risks to arise", the financial services firm said in the report. It further added that overall spending on rural/social schemes is expected to stay stable as a percentage of and policymakers will continue to focus on ensuring the efficiency of Considering the upcoming state elections in 2018, and general election in May 2019 and weak private investment, concerns have emerged over the government's fiscal position. According to Morgan Stanley, the is expected to remain on a recovery path and is likely to improve to 7.5 per cent in 2018-19. "Our base case view is that the will gather further momentum in the coming quarters as the underlying drivers of consumption and exports should remain supportive. The now has a clear runway for growth," it added. Even though spending growth is expected to accelerate, our base case is that we do not expect a material impact on the outlook as a result of this increased expenditure, the report said. "We expect an acceleration in expenditure growth and a wider in FY2019, but believe that the impact on the outlook should be relatively muted," it added.

First Published: Sun, January 21 2018. 12:08 IST