The Current Account Deficit is expected to fall by almost 50 per cent to USD 45 billion in the current financial year following restrictions on gold imports and the narrowing of trade deficit.
"CAD will be between USD 40-45 billion and there will also be an accretion of USD 10 billion to forex reserves during this fiscal," a top finance ministry official told PTI.
The Reserve Bank had last month projected CAD to be at less than USD 50 billion or 2.5 per cent, down from USD 88.2 billion or 4.8 per cent of GDP in 2012-13.
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"FII inflows have been quite robust in this fiscal which has helped in containing the CAD. There has been an improvement in trade deficit on account of better performance of exports," the official said.
India's foreign exchange reserve as on January 31 stood at USD 291 billion. Besides, Foreign Institutional Investors have invested Rs 56,560 crore in equities so far in the current fiscal, ending March 31.
CAD had touched a record high of USD 88.2 billion in 2012-13. However, following a series of measures by both the RBI and the government, it is likely to drop drastically.
In the first half (April-September) of 2013-14, CAD narrowed to USD 26.9 billion (3.1 per cent), from USD 37.9 billion (4.5 per cent) in the first half of 2012-13.
The government hiked import duty thrice last year to 10 per cent on gold imports in wake of high CAD which in turn was impacting the value of the rupee. The Reserve Bank too imposed a series of curbs to restrict gold imports.
Gold imports, which touched a high of 162 tonnes in May, fell to 19.3 tonnes in November.
In value terms, gold and silver imports in April-December period declined 30.3 per cent to USD 27.3 billion from USD 39.2 billion during the same period a year earlier.
Meanwhile, for the April-December period, exports aggregated to USD 230.3 billion, and imports to USD 340.3 billion, with the trade deficit at USD 110 billion.
It was USD 147 billion in the same period of 2013-13 fiscal.