IMF today projected a higher 5.4 per cent economic growth for India in 2014-15 and suggested strengthening of inflation management polices and doing away with supply bottlenecks for better GDP.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) also sees inflation, driven by food prices, remaining near double digits in 2014-15. Though it said tight monetary policy is likely to slow growth recovery.
"Growth is projected at 4.6 per cent for fiscal year 2013-14, and should pick up to 5.4 per cent in 2014-15 (at factor cost)," the multilateral agency said in its report after concluding annual discussions with India.
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Meanwhile, in a note prepared for the G20 leaders' meet that will start on February 22 in Sydney, the IMF asked high inflation countries, like India to strengthen their fiscal and monetary policy frame work to tackle price rise.
"On the monetary front, economies where inflation is still relatively high, or where policy credibility has come into question, need to continue tightening monetary policy in the context of strengthened policy frameworks (India and Turkey)," IMF said in a note prepared for the G20 leaders' meet starting on February 22 in Sydney.
Inflation has been a major concern for India for the past few years. However, in the past few months, it has starting showing sings of moderation.
India's central bank RBI has adopted a hawkish monetary stance to tame inflation.
The Washington-headquartered agency also stressed that countries like India needs to better its supply infrastructure by doing away bottlenecks to achieve faster growth, job creation and poverty reduction.