"Sovereign credit rating trends in 2015 will depend on the extent to which the government addresses high fiscal expenditures, recurrent food price inflation, and wide infrastructure deficit," Moody's said in a report.
All the three big international rating agencies such as S&P, Moody's and Fitch have BBB ratings on the country's sovereign with a stable outlook. The current rating is closest to junk status or below investment grade.
The report says the government's ability and willingness to undertake structural reforms will have a bearing on the credit rating outlook of the country.
The report further said the recent steps are augmented with additional steps next year to address infrastructure gaps and attract foreign direct investment inflows, government policies can support the sovereign credit profile through higher medium term GDP growth.
The economy, after growing at over 9 per cent for three successive years has lost the steam and grew at sub-5 per cent in the past two fiscals due to policy paralysis under the past government. In the first quarter of this fiscal the GDP clipped at an unexpected 5.7 per cent, while the Q2 GDP print is slated to be much lower at 5-5.3 per cent. The government will release the Q2 GDP numbers later this week.