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Friday, November 07, 2008

IMF slashes India’s 2009 growth to 6.3%

Washington: The International Monetary Fund, or IMF, predicted lower growth in India and economic contractions in the US, Japan and euro region next year, calling for further interest rate cuts and fiscal stimulus.
Its estimate for India’s growth in 2009 is now 6.3%, 0.6 percentage points lower than its earlier estimate of 6.9% made just a month ago. And its estimate for the country’s growth in 2008 is down 0.1 percentage points to 7.8%.
Also See Losing Steam (PDF)
An economist said India could grow faster than IMF’s estimate. “Growth next year will definitely be slower than this year, but it may still touch 7%. New oil refineries coming up next year will also boost GDP (gross domestic product). I agree with IMF that growth momentum will slow further, but it may pick up towards the end of next year,” said Dharmakirti Joshi, principal economist with credit rating agency Crisil Ltd. Joshi’s estimate of growth this year is 7.5%.
“Markets have entered a vicious cycle of asset de-leveraging, price declines and investor redemptions,” IMF said in an update to its World Economic Outlook report, released in Washington on Thursday. “Global action to support financial markets and provide further fiscal stimulus and monetary easing can help limit the decline in world growth.”
The revisions reflect a further choking-off of credit to companies and businesses in the past month. The Bank of England on Thursday declared the most serious banking “disruption” in almost a century, cutting its benchmark interest rate to the lowest level since 1955.
Also Read Rapidly weakening prospects call for new policy stimulus (PDF)
US gross domestic product will contract 0.7%, Japan’s will shrink 0.2% and the euro area’s 0.5% in 2009, IMF said on Thursday in Washington. The fund last month foresaw 0.1% US growth, with expansions of 0.5% in Japan and 0.2% in the euro zone.
Global growth will be 2.2% next year, down from 3.7% this year, IMF said. The fund said in its semiannual World Economic Outlook report on 7 October that world GDP would rise 3% in 2009. As recently as July, IMF economists expected a 3.9% expansion.
IMF has said that a growth rate of 3% or less is “equivalent to a global recession”.
Growth in the US “will suffer as households respond to depreciating real and financial assets and tightening financial conditions,” IMF said. In Japan, “growth from net exports is expected to decline”. The 15-nation euro region will be “hard hit” by the slowdown, the fund said.
IMF also warned on Thursday of growing risks of deflationary conditions in advanced economies.
“There is a clear need for additional macroeconomic stimulus relative to what has been announced thus far,” the fund said. “Room to ease monetary policy should be exploited, especially now that inflation concerns have moderated.”
As the credit crunch widens, the reversal in major developed countries is spreading to poorer nations, increasing demand for IMF loans.
In emerging and developing countries, GDP in 2009 will increase 5.1%, less than the 6.1 % expansion the fund predicted in October. China’s growth will measure 8.5% next year, weaker than the 9.3% forecast a month ago.
Since the fund produced its forecast in October, the outlook for developing countries has deteriorated as investors shunned their currencies and bonds, sending borrowing costs climbing.
India’s stock market and currency are both down. The benchmark index of the Bombay Stock Exchange has fallen 52.02% since January and the rupee has lost 17.42% against the dollar in the same period.

No need to get panicky on slowdown: Nasscom

Hyderabad, Nov. 6 Don’t talk of gloom and doom, Mr Som Mittal, President of Nasscom, asks all those who refers to the slowdown and its impact on the Indian IT, ITES, animation and gaming industries.

Releasing the Nasscom Animation and Gaming Report 2008 here on Thursday, he said the fundamentals of the Indian economy were very strong and that there was no need to get panicky.

Referring to the highlights of the report, he pegged the animation industry at $1.16 billion by 2012 as against an estimated $460 million in 2008. The industry would grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 27 per cent in the next four years.

During the same time, the fledgling gaming industry would grow to $1 billion from $212 million, growing at a CAGR of 50 per cent.

He said the industry needed Government support in the form of reduced taxes and providing infrastructure.

Mr Mittal, who was here in connection with the Nasscom Animation and Gaming India 2008, said the number of H1 visas India received were just 14 per cent of all the visas given by the US. Making light of the reports that the slowdown would spell doom for the Indian industry, he said the country contributed just three per cent of the IT business market globally.

Mr Mittal and other speakers, including Dr Ganesh Natarajan, Chairman of Nasscom and Global Chief Executive Officer of Zensar, bet on the evolving opportunities in the domestic market itself.

Contemporary themes


Though started with mythological themes such as Hanuman and Ramayan, the animation industry had come of age with contemporary themes like Roadside Romeo and Toonpur Ka Superhero was gaining currency.

“Last year itself, we saw announcement of 85 domestic animation movies. Work on 28 of these are in different stages of production,” the Nasscom report, which was jointly produced by Ernst & Young, said.

The report pointed out that the industry faced with lack of original content. “The domestic demand for animation is restricted to select animation movies and advertising. Lack of quality resources, high attrition rates and absence of sufficient bandwidth are some of the issues that need to be addressed,” it said.

Earlier addressing the inaugural of the conference, Dr Ganesh said Mr Obama’s victory would not mean death for outsourcing business. His election, in fact, would result in huge opportunities for India as a strong US would have a cascading impact.