India - China: This Decade belongs to India - Nomura

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India - China: This Decade belongs to India - Nomura

Time, comparative advantage  and a host of supportive factors are set to propel India as the fastest-growing economy in this decade, alongside southeast Asian countries, as per a report by Nomura published Monday.

Nomura expects India to register a CAGR of around 6.6 per cent between FY23 and FY30, the strongest growth phase since FY10.

Having already grown at a faster rate than other major economies in the world since the turn of the Covid-19 pandemic, the stage is set for India to replace China as the 'high-flying geese', thereby unlocking its full growth potential, Nomura said.

 

Companies looking to relocate: India, a preferred location

With companies looking elsewhere to reduce their reliance  on China, it is India and other Southeast Asian countries like Indonesia and the Philippines that have emerged as Asia's new high-flying geese.

As per the JETRO 2022 survey, companies wanting to expand their operations within ASEAN have risen for a second straight year. And more than half of the respondents seek to expand operations in India and Vietnam within the next one to two years.

Though nascent, supply chain systems are evolving and some have gained more than others. Nomura in its report said that the process should accelerate in the next 3-5 years. Asia is likely to benefit the most, led by India and ASEAN.

Optimism on India: Structural reforms undertaken by the Indian policymakers in recent years and higher allocation towards capital expenditure capex should help India’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth reach around 6.6 per cent per annum over the medium term, and support the Rupee, Nomura said.

"We see a few reasons to remain optimistic that infrastructure spending and execution will accelerate in the medium term, particularly in India, Indonesia and the Philippines," the agency said in its report.

The report notes that governments in India and parts of Southeast Asia have placed a high priority on infrastructure development and become more strategic around project execution and have been making significant progress.

 

Factors that will drive India's growth

Following its recent trend, the Indian government in its FY24 budget allocated a record high of Rs 10 lakh crore towards capital expenditure. The Narendra Modi-led central government has ramped up capex spending to 3.3 per cent of GDP from a pre-pandemic average of 1.7 per cent.

Despite project implementation delays, a variety of factors like a stable political dispensation, focus on reforms, a simplification of tax administration, schemes like PLI and ‘friend-shoring’ puts India in a sweet spot over the next decade, says Nomura.

However, a mix of slowing global growth and lagged effects from monetary policy tightening are likely to impede India's growth prospects in the near term,

Nomura notes that banks and corporates in India have ‘significantly’ deleveraged in recent years to clean up clogged balance sheets that had stalled private capex.

Anand JC (correspondent, Economic Times) notes India a few months ago pipped China as the world’s most populous country. This includes one of the largest cohorts of youth (below the age of 15) among G-20, while 67 per cent of the population is in the working age bracket.

The central government’s economic survey expects output to increase by at least four times the amount of capex, while the RBI expects the dynamic capex multiplier at a peak of 3.25 times in year four.


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