"The outlook on growth is...Threatened by certain downside risks; the biggest of them being the high rate of inflation, which further dents the ability of the RBI to extend monetary policy support to growth revival," it said.
The Reserve Bank has maintained a hawkish policy stance and raised a key interest rate by 0.25 per cent in its latest monetary policy review with the aim of taming inflation.
The ministry underlined the need to contain wholesale price inflation at below 6 per cent "so that necessary leeway is available to the RBI to support economic recovery."
On the positive side, however, the ministry maintained that the government's recent initiatives could help to place India on a high growth path.
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"...The recent structural reforms undertaken by the government of India are likely to place the economy on a higher potential growth path, from where acceleration to a higher growth trajectory can occur reasonably quickly, once global recovery gains momentum and cyclical upturn strengthens," the document added.
India's economic growth slipped a decade low of 4.5 per cent in 2012-13. The country's GDP is estimated to expand 4.9 per cent in the current financial year.
The government as well as the RBI took a slew of measures, including curbs on gold imports, to bring down CAD, which had affected the value of the rupee and contributed to inflation.
Highlighting the need to curtail the fiscal deficit, the document said it should be done while protecting capital expenditure.
On the manufacturing sector, the document said "it is sine qua non for raising the growth rate and sustaining it over the medium term. Continuing the recent initiatives of the government to speed up project implementation and boost investment will help.