The Reserve Bank today said the macroeconomic risks to the Indian economy have increased over the last six months due to the fall in growth, external sector developments and subdued performance of the corporate sector.
"The macroeconomic risks to the economy have increased over the past six months, mainly on the dimensions of domestic growth, external sector and corporate sector performance," the apex bank said in its biannual Financial Stability Report (FSR) released this evening.
The report said financing the high current account deficit (CAD), which hit an all-time high of 4.8% of GDP in FY13 - a key concern on the external front - is a "stress point" for the economy as evident from the recent rupee depreciation on global cues.
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Going ahead the improvement in the quality of fiscal consolidation will be crucial for ensuring sustainable high growth and macroeconomic stability, the FSR report said.
On the corporate sector, the report said its performance has been "subdued" and flagged concern over corporates' increasing external borrowing and unhedged exposures, saying this can further "increase their vulnerabilities".
The FSR, however, also noted some positive factors like risks from global growth, domestic inflation and fiscal stance having receded.
The report said there are indications of growth slowdown having hit a trough, while inflation is also moderating. The measures to curb gold demand which can help narrow the CAD - are also bearing fruit.
The apex bank said slowdown in growth was a result of domestic supply bottlenecks, policy uncertainty, dampened investment sentiment and slackening external demand. Among all these negative factors, the fall in inflation gave "some relief".