India's economy will likely make a gradual recovery this year, helped by a rebound in capital investments as well as a pick-up in private consumption, but rising bad loans at its banks threaten to choke the recovery, the OECD said on Tuesday.
In its latest economic outlook, the Paris-based think tank said growth in Asia's third-largest economy was expected to edge up to 4.9 per cent in calendar year 2014 from 4.5 per cent a year earlier and accelerate further to 5.9 per cent in 2015. The estimates are predicated on hopes of an upturn in capital investments after an ongoing national election and a boost in consumption driven by slowing inflation.
India is facing the worst economic slowdown since the 1980s as investment growth has hit an 11-year low. Capital investment contributes nearly 35 per cent to India's economy, but it probably barely grew in the financial year that ended in March. To break the investment logjam, a prime minister-headed panel, known as the Cabinet Committee on Investment, has cleared projects worth about 6 per cent of gross domestic product.
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The report urged New Delhi to rapidly carry out pending labour, fiscal and tax reforms for a faster economic revival. It also backed a Reserve Bank of India panel's proposal for moving to an inflation target of 4 per cent in three years while setting monetary policy, sharply below current levels.
"The proposed inflation targeting framework will help anchor price expectations and improve business sentiment and consumer confidence," it said.