S&P Global Ratings maintained the lowest investment grade rating of 'BBB-' with a 'stable' outlook for India saying it wants to see more efforts to lower government debt to below 60 per cent of GDP and that it did not expect revenues to rise enough to meaningfully lower the deficit over the medium term.
"The stable outlook balances India's sound external position and inclusive policy making tradition against the vulnerabilities stemming from its low per capita income and weak public finances," S&P said in a statement.
Like S&P, Fitch Ratings also rates India at 'BBB-minus', the lowest investment-grade, with a 'stable' outlook. Moody's Investors Service rates India at an equivalent 'Baa3', but with a "positive" outlook.
The status quo in the rating triggered an angry reaction from the government with Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das saying that upgrade did not come despite the fact that reforms undertaken by India unparalleled any major economy anywhere in the world and that calls for 'introspection' on part of the rating agencies.
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"If the rating has not been improved, it's a matter which doesn't bother us so much. It's a question which calls for an introspection among those who do the rating," Das said.
In September, another global rating agency Moody's had termed India's reforms slow with muted private investment and NPAs a challenge, and had said it could upgrade India's rating in 1-2 years if it is convinced that reforms are "tangible".
two years, including building strong external position, controlling inflation and structural reforms like the Goods and Services Tax and bankruptcy code, saying that globally investors recognise these.
"If you compare the various factors which the report itself talk about, is there any other economy that equals this? So with all this if there no improvement I think it's a matter for the rating agency itself to put a question to itself and perhaps undertake a kind of introspection," he said.
The government will continue to adhere to the path of economic reforms, the various policy initiatives, he said, adding that the reforms will continue and it's for the rating agencies to take their own view.
Currently, government debt amounts to about 69 per cent of the GDP.
Downward pressure on the ratings could re-emerge if growth disappoints as a result of stalling reforms or if interest rate-setting monetary policy committee does not achieve inflation targets.
A higher-than-expected deterioration in the nation's external liquidity position could also put downward pressure on ratings, S&P added.
The rating agency expects economy to grow 7.9 per cent in 2016 and 8 per cent on average over 2016-2018. It also expects current account deficit to be at 1.4 per cent of the GDP in 2016 and the RBI to meet its inflation target of 5 per cent by March 2017.
S&P estimated that PSU banks need capital infusion of about USD 45 billion by 2019, given their weak profitability, to meet Basel III capital norms, as against USD 11 billion support pledged by the government.
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Asked about concerns over banking sector expressed by S&P, Das said: "The government has undertaken a number of measures to address these issues. It is nothing that is not known to us and that will continuously engage the attention of the government."
"We expect the RBI to achieve the inflation target of 5 per cent by March 2017 as it advances along a glide path to the medium-term inflation target," it added.
These measures by the central bank will support its ability to sustain economic growth while attenuating economic or financial shocks, the rating agency said.
S&P had in September 2014 upgraded India's rating outlook to stable from negative and said that a strong political mandate would help in fiscal and economic reforms.
It expressed concerns over government delaying subsidy cuts and the banking sector needing about USD 45 billion, or 2 per cent of the India's GDP, in capital infusion by 2019.
"Overall, we believe public finances are set to remain key rating constraints for some time," S&P said.
"We believe domestic supply-side factors will increasingly bind economic performance and the government has little ability to undertake countercyclical fiscal policy given its current debt burden," it said.
India has a long history of high general government fiscal deficits (averaging 8.8 per cent of GDP over the past 20 years and 7 per cent in the past five years).
The deficits have not closed India's sizable shortfalls in basic services and infrastructure, S&P said, adding the country's fiscal challenges reflect both revenue under-performance and constraints on expenditure.
It said India's high fiscal deficits have led to the accumulation of sizable general government borrowings (about 69 per cent of GDP, net of liquid assets).