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This is an archive article published on July 9, 2012

8216;Growth to be under 6,polls to add fuel8217;

India's economic growth will fall below 6 per cent mark in this financial year: StanChart

India8217;s economic growth will fall below 6 per cent mark in this financial year,a majority of corporates surveyed by Standard Chartered said today.

The survey,in which 125 corporate clients of the bank from south India participated,further said India may return to the high growth path of over 9 per cent after the general elections in 2014.

As much as 72 per cent surveyed said GDP growth will fall below 6 per cent and 20 per cent even predicted it to be less than 5 per cent this fiscal.

On the crucial question of revival in growth to the pre-2008 crisis levels of near 9 per cent,86 per cent of respondents said it will be before 2016 with a majority 80 per cent of them saying it will be between 2014 and 2016.

8220;They probably expect the 2014 general elections to effect a change in the political scenario that will be more conducive to economic growth,8221; the bank said.

There has been a rash among analysts and think-tanks in cutting GDP growth estimates following the release of official data in May which indicated quarterly growth had fallen to a nine-year low during the last quarter of FY12,while the growth for the entire fiscal at 6.5 per cent was lower than the one observed during the peak of the post-Lehman credit crisis of 2008.

Japanese bank Nomura was the last one to cut its forecast,when it revised down its growth estimate to 5.5 per cent last week,citing deadlock in fiscal and monetary policy.

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The government is targeting a GDP growth of 7.6 per cent for the fiscal while Standard Chartered8217;s in-house economists have pegged it at 6.2 per cent.

The slowdown in growth is being attributed to a variety of factors,including the weak external trade situation which has widened our current account deficit to record lows,the depreciation in rupee,and domestic issues like a 8220;policy paralysis8221; and the elevated interest rates of RBI,which is driving with the inflation number in mind.

On expectations of a rate cut by the RBI,66 per cent of the respondents thought rate cuts of up to 0.50 per cent are in the offing.

With the rupee continuing to being volatile,40 per cent of those surveyed felt it will slide below Rs 57 to the dollar by September,possibly touching new lows from the Rs 57.15,while 4 per cent said it will fall below Rs 60.

 

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