Commenting on the recent interest rate hike by the US Fed, Dr. A Didar Singh, Secretary General of the FICCI said "The Fed's decision to raise the US interest rate by 0.25 points is as anticipated. We do not expect any major impact on India. Our economic fundamentals remain strong with improved growth and twin deficits largely under control."
"The rate hike also signals a stronger US economy, which bodes well for the pick-up of demand globally and hence for Indian exports of goods and services", Dr. Singh added.
Singh's statement came a day after the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.25%, its first increase in nine years.
The rate hike was announced after a two-day policy meeting between officials with stocks rallying in early trading in Europe and in the US.
The rate, which stands at 0.5 % after the increase, was kept the same throughout the global credit crunch so that financial institutions could borrow cheaply, lend at lower rates.
The US central bank cited the increased household spending and investment by business, along with a continued low rate of inflation, as the reasons for its actions. The bank also slightly raised its projection for economic growth next year, from 2.3% to 2.4%. That suggests that the bank does not think the rate increase will damage growth. US share markets jumped in response.
The move is likely to cause ripples around the world. It could also mean higher borrowing costs for developing economies, many of which are already seeing slow growth.
Much of what happens in India will depend on how foreign institutional investors (FIIs) react to the Fed hike. FIIs have withdrawn nearly $2.5 billion from domestic markets since November in anticipation of a hike.