The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued its latest assessment of the state of the economy. The paper notes the marked slowdown in the global economy; it exudes confidence in the sustainability of 6.7%-7% GDP growth in India. In particular, the assessment sounds buoyant on manufacturing, and household consumption, while taking cognizance of resilience in the services sector. The inflation is forecasted to stay close to the lower bound of the RBI tolerance limit (4-6%).
Global economy slowing
The RBI paper highlights some areas of concern for the global economy. In RBI’s assessment global growth has lost some speed in the first half of 2024 relative to the preceding semester, and momentum has slackened further in the third quarter.
The paper notes, “All around, indicators point increasingly to slowing global economic activity, more so on the eastern shores of the Atlantic, which vindicated the ECB’s September rate cut to secure a soft landing. In the US, the now famous remark – “The time has come for policy to adjust” – has built up expectations that the economy is gaining prominence in monetary policy discourse. In China, even though consumer inflation has picked up modestly due to supply constraints related to extreme weather, weakening producer prices are fueling concerns that deflationary forces are taking root. A rising number of manufacturing industries face lacklustre demand alongside a deep property market downturn now into its third year.” In particular—
Job growth is getting softer than initially anticipated as labour markets continue to slow down, unemployment rates are ticking up and wage growth is easing, although historically high immigration is providing some offset. Consumer confidence surveys show a deterioration in sentiment about jobs.
Equity prices are still stretched but the crash in Nvidia’s stock in early September wiped out about US$ 300 billion in market value, hinting that the artificial intelligence (AI) overhype may be tapering off and expectations are catching up with reality.
Parched returns are drying up the venture capital ecosystem. Record volumes of corporate debt are being issued to head off the volatility triggered by worsening macroeconomic data, and to benefit from falling borrowing and refinancing costs.
OPEC plus has decided to delay a planned output increase as crude prices slumped below US$ 70 per barrel briefly on September 10, but it still plans to revive 2.2 million barrels per day of idle supplies over the course of 2025. Meanwhile, non-OPEC supplies are rising faster, and as the International Energy Agency warns in its September 2024 report, global oil demand is slowing sharply – electric vehicles are already displacing 1.8 million barrels of oil every day – and this is fuelling the sell-off in oil markets. In metal markets, the copper-gold price ratio is closing on to 4 – a rising ratio indicates higher industrial demand and hence a positive growth outlook.
Although upside pressures have likely been seen off, the pace of disinflation remains sluggish, provoking caution among monetary policy authorities about the pace of easing. In fact, the Governing Council of the ECB noted in its September meeting that inflation is expected to rise again in the latter part of this year, partly because previous sharp falls in energy prices will drop out of the annual rates.
Defying gravity, global merchandise trade volume continued to recover in the third quarter of 2024, according to the latest World Trade Organization (WTO) Goods Trade Barometer, amidst rising geopolitical tensions, ongoing regional conflicts, shifting monetary policy in advanced economies (AEs) and weakening export orders. Barring the sub-par performance of electronics, other components of global trade such as automotive products, container shipping and air freight are all firmly above trend, but new export orders are turning down, and raw materials have declined – causes for concern going forward.
EMEs are building up a growth rate lead over AEs to levels not seen in 15 years. Projections suggest that the proportion of EMEs other than China in which per capita GDP is likely to rise faster than the US is on course to surge from 48 per cent over the past five years to 88 per cent in the next five years.
In the recent period, the US dollar has weakened; historically, this has led to greater capital flows to emerging markets.
The global supply chain pressures index (GSCPI) increased in August 2024, rising above its historical average for the first time since November 2023. Geopolitical risks remained high due to continued tensions in the Middle East, albeit with a sequential moderation in August 2024. Supply disruptions have kept container shipping costs elevated, although they recorded some moderation during August-September 2024 from the peak levels recorded in July.
Domestic economy
The RBI sounds quite sanguine about the domestic economic growth, regardless of the soft 1QFY25 data. The paper cautions, “more needs to be read into the slowing of India’s GDP in Q1:2024-25 than just disappointment.” It points out that “The seasonally adjusted momentum of Q1 GDP was strong. Gross value added (GVA) growth actually rose sequentially in Q1, but the increase in subsidies – 3.6 per cent by the Union government and 26 per cent by the states – offset the gains from showing up in GDP growth.”
Household consumption is poised to grow faster in Q2 as headline inflation eases, with a revival of rural demand already taking hold.
The widening trade deficit and a spurt in overseas travel by Indians is likely to swing the current account balance from a small surplus in January-March 2024 to a deficit of 1-1.2 per cent of GDP in the first half of 2024-25. Capital flows in the form of portfolio debt flows, net FDI and non-resident deposits are providing comfortable financing.
Merger and acquisitions deals have been on the decline in the Asia-Pacific region in 2024, but India has emerged as a bright spot with an increase in volumes.
Agriculture suffered in Q1:2024-25 as India experienced the highest number of heatwave days in the summer of 2024, surpassing the previous high in 2010.
The underperformance of agriculture in Q1 was compensated for by a buoyant manufacturing sector and resilient services.
Global funds have been investing heavily in the Indian debt market for the fifth month in a row since May 2024. On the other hand, corporate debt issuances remained low during the financial year so far despite easing yields as issuers awaited the US rate cut.
In the credit market, with deposit mobilization becoming a challenge, banks continue to rely heavily on certificates of deposit to meet funding needs so that lagging deposit growth does not constrain credit. Banks are also offering higher interest rates on deposits, with more than two-thirds of term deposits earning 7 per cent and above. The gap between credit and deposit growth is, however, beginning to narrow. Non-banking financial companies are increasingly turning to offshore bonds. Microfinance institutions are facing some asset quality issues, warranting slowing down the pace of loan growth.
Headline CPI inflation came in below the Reserve Bank’s target for the second consecutive month in its August reading. This is a positive development, especially as the index has remained flat between July and August.
Surplus liquidity in the banking system moderated in the latter half of August, driven by build-up of government cash balances due to GST payments. In early September, however, a pickup in government spending led to the return of liquidity to the banking system. Overall, the average daily net absorption under the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) decreased to ₹1.45 lakh crore during August 16 to September 17, 2024, from ₹1.52 lakh crore during July 16 and August 15, 2024.