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November 16, 2008
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Sunday
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Ziqa'ad 17, 1429
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India takes steps to sustain growth
MUMBAI, Nov 15: The global slowdown is having a bigger than expected impact on India’s economy, the central bank said on Saturday as it took the latest in a series of steps to improve money market liquidity and help exporters.
As world leaders met in Washington to address the worst financial crisis in 80 years, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said more domestic steps, including export credit measures, were imperative to sustain growth momentum.
The central bank has already reduced its key lending rate, slashed banks’ cash reserve requirements and cut their bond reserve requirements in the past month to release funds into a banking system strained by the global financial crisis.
“There are indications that the global slowdown is deepening with a larger than originally expected impact on the domestic economy, particularly for the demand conditions in the medium and small industry sector and export-oriented sectors,” it said in a statement posted on its website.
“Particular attention needs to be paid to maintaining the viability of sectors that contribute significantly to employment and exports.” The global credit crisis paralysed India’s money markets last month, prompting the bank to cut its main lending rate by 150 basis points to 7.5 per cent and pump in cash. But firms’ interest costs have risen as they also battle slowing demand and shrinking export markets.
Factory output growth has fallen, manufacturers have put expansion plans on hold, and government receipts from factory gate taxes contracted in October.
“There is definitely a liquidity problem which persists even now and needs to be addressed,” Saugata Bhattacharya, an economist with Axis Bank, said.
“The export sector of the economy is extremely vulnerable as supply of funds is squeezed,” Bhattacharya said.
India’s $1 trillion economy grew at an annual rate of 9 per cent or above in the past three fiscal years, second only to China among major economies.
The central bank forecast last month it would grow 7.5 to 8.0 per cent this fiscal year, which ends in March, but economists say growth is more likely to be about 7 per cent.—Reuters
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