Indian economy is slowing down while most of the developed world led by the US and Japan are seeing better growth prospects, Paris-based think-tank OECD said today.
The latest assessment for India comes at a time when the economy is grappling with high inflation and fiscal deficit.
The projections are based on OECD's Composite Leading Indicators (CLIs) -- that are designed to indicate turning points in an economy.
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In January, India's CLI stood at 97.2 marginally lower than 97.3 recorded in December last year.
The country's CLI has been on the decline since September 2012 when it touched 98.
"In China, India and to a lesser degree in Brazil the CLIs point to growth below trend. In Russia however, the CLI points to growth picking up," OECD said in a statement.
Indian economic growth slipped to 4.5% in the three months ended December 2012, the lowest for any quarter in a decade.
The GDP had grown by 6% in the October-December period of last fiscal.
The economic growth in the nine months ended December 2012 stood at 5.1%, lower than 6.6% seen in the year-ago period.
Fiscal deficit for the current financial year (2012-13) is projected to be 5.2% of GDP.
However, OECD's readings for developed nations such as the US and Japan are positive.
"In the US and Japan, the CLIs continue to point to economic growth firming. In the Euro Area as a whole, and in particular Germany, the CLIs point to a pick-up in growth," it noted.