Strong growth momentum continues
India is expected to show slower but still robust growth momentum in 2024. In 2023, a combination of subdued global demand and a weak monsoon season have weighed on Indian exports and household consumption. Net exports were a drag on GDP amid global trade slowdown. Going ahead, weak external markets will however continue to weigh on Indian export growth. Private consumption growth will be supported by durable urban demand amid strong personal loan growth. An improvement in rural demand will materialise only if favourable weather conditions prevail and farm output improves. An easing of lending standards brought about by healthy bank balance sheets and election-related spending should support consumption.
Retail inflation saw a renewed push higher into the end of 2023, reflecting weather-related impacts on the main food and beverage segment, which accounts for nearly half of the consumer price index basket. Spiking prices for certain food items such as rice and onions due to an patchy monsoon led to strong inflationary pressures, which prompted the government to implement a combination of measures, including export restrictions, stocking limits, releasing government supplies, to tame prices ahead of the 2024 general elections. Furthermore, India continues to enjoy savings from discounted Russian oil imports. The disinflation trend should continue in 2024, but is likely to remain above central bank’s target of 4%. Furthermore, food price volatility continues to pose upside risks to the inflation outlook, which should see the Reserve Bank of India maintaining its policy interest rate at 6.5% for at least the first half of 2024.
The medium-term outlook has brightened, bolstered by the push on infrastructure spending over the past five years which is also acting as a key growth catalyst. Capital expenditure rose to a record 3.3% of GDP in the fiscal year 2023-24 from 2.7% previously. Fixed investment (29% of GDP) continued to grow at a solid pace in 2023, contributing 45% of the GDP growth in the first three quarters of 2023, compared to 49% in 2022. Continued emphasis on infrastructure investment through flagship programmes such as the National Infrastructure Pipeline and the National Logistics Policy will play a crucial role in the country’s capital spending in 2024. We expect the central government to set aside another significant amount for capital expenditure in the fiscal year 2024-25. The authorities’ supply-side push towards manufacturing such as the Make in India initiative, a production-linked incentive scheme, a programme for semiconductor and display manufacturing, and continued supply diversification would also provide the impetus for private sector investments. Boasting stronger balance sheets after years of deleveraging, India’s banking sector is also in a stronger financial position to support corporate lending to the infrastructure sector.
Fiscal consolidation to continue
The budget deficit has been shrinking since the pandemic-impacted surge to -12.9% of GDP during 2020. Fiscal consolidation is expected to continue. India’s gross tax-to-GDP ratio is low at an estimated 11% of GDP in FY2023-24, compared to the Asia Pacific average of 19.8% and the OECD average of 34.1%. More careful targeting of subsidies and additional revenue generation (new taxes on asset sales) will be necessary to achieve a longstanding plan to narrow the fiscal deficit to -4.5% of GDP by FY2025-26. However, there will be spending pressures in 2024 arising from pre-election expenditure on fuel and food support through subsidy allocations. The budget deficit has been mostly financed by market borrowings through government securities and treasury bills (69%), but is also increasingly sourced from issuing securities against small savings (26%), which are public accounts that collect money from the public in savings schemes.
The current account deficit narrowed to 0.7% of GDP in the first three quarters of 2023 due to both a smaller merchandise trade deficit (6.5% of GDP) and a larger services trade surplus (4.4% of GDP) linked to IT services. Net outflows from the income accounts continued, reflecting payments of foreign investment income, but also a slowdown in remittances (1.7% of GDP) growth. India's main sources for remittances were the United Arab Emirates, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Kuwait.
National elections
The ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won three out of five state elections (Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh) in November 2023, giving a significant boost for the BJP ahead of a national general election due by May 2024, in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi will seek a third term. Modi remains widely popular after a decade in power, and BJP successfully broadened its popular support to include women and marginalised groups, building on its traditional Hindutva base. Furthermore, internal rivalries within the opposition alliance led by the Congress and a lack of a viable alternative social vision are brightening BJP’s election prospects in 2024.
India’s longstanding commitment to strategic autonomy is a cornerstone of its foreign policy and the country prefers to strike its own path in global geopolitics. While India has close strategic ties with the US and is part of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) with Australia, Japan and the US, it is the only major power to have membership in other organisations such as BRICS, ASEAN Regional Forum and Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Meanwhile, tensions in the India-China border region have remained stable over the past three years after a deadly clash in 2020. But the threat of fresh conflicts will subsist unless the bilateral relationship improves. India has also deepened ties with Israel, reflected in its membership in I2U2 (Israel, India, United Arab Emirates and the US) and the India-Middle-East-Europe Corridor (IMEEC).