India’s medium-term potential growth is likely to be above 7 per
cent, backed by policy reforms, higher investments and stable global
growth environment, says an UBS report.
According to the global
financial services major, India ranks higher in medium-term growth
potential compared to other emerging markets like Brazil (2.2-2.8 per
cent), Russia (1.5-2.0 per cent), Indonesia (5.4-5.8 per cent) and China
(5.5-6.0 per cent).
India needs to adopt reforms like stepping
up infrastructure investment, labour market reforms, education &
health reforms, easing of regulatory hurdles, and others to improve its
potential growth outlook gradually over the medium term, the report
said.
It however noted that considering the fiscal constraints
and sluggish investment cycle, boosting India’s economic growth beyond 8
per cent without improving potential growth over the next two to three
years will entail widening of macro stability risks and is
"unsustainable".
Slight improvement
India’s
potential growth slowed from 7.6 per cent average estimated during
2003-08 to 6.7 per cent in 2014-15 as investments moderated and reform
momentum weakened. "However, over the past four years, India’s potential
growth has improved to slightly above the 7 per cent level in 2016-17
as per our estimates," UBS said.
It further said the improvement
in GDP growth was largely owing to economic and institutional reforms
undertaken by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi government like
implementation of GST, adoption of inflation targeting, new bankruptcy
code, financial inclusion, improvement in ease of doing business,
measures to curb ’black money’, encouraging digitalisation, and the
like.