Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram while giving India's assessment of the S & P projection said the country has taken several measures to stabilise the economy despite the turmoil in the global economy.
He also wondered which mathematical model was relied upon by S & P to come to the statistical conclusion of a potential downgrade.
"There is no chance of a downgrade," he told reporters accompanying Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on his visit to Russia to attend the eighth summit of the Group of 20 industrialised and big emerging economies at St Petersburg.
At a news briefing in Seoul on Tuesday, Kim Eng Tan, an analyst at S & P, said, "We have a negative outlook on India. We think the chance of a downgrade in the next one two two years is one out of three".
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Tan called the chance of a downgrade of India higher than that of Indonesia, where the rupiah fell to a four-year low on Tuesday. Besides a widening Current Account Deficit (CAD) that has hurt India, the rupee has lost one-fifth of its value to a dollar this year.
"We will not breach the red line," Mayaram said referring to Finance Minister P Chidambaram setting out a red line of a 3.7 per cent fiscal deficit target.
He did not rule out the possibility of the CAD getting even lower than 3.7 per cent.