A hung verdict biggest threat to India's ratings: Moody's
A fragmented government of smaller parties will be the "biggest threat"
to the country's credit quality, according to international rating
agency Moody's.
"History has often revealed election outcomes
to be quite different from poll data, and parliamentary arithmetic has
resulted in coalition governments for about the last two decades," the
agency said in a note, adding that the Modi-led BJP is tipped to come to
power according to many opinion polls.
"The biggest electoral
threat to credit quality would be if a fragmented coalition of smaller
parties without a common economic reform goals comes to power," it
added.
The emergence of such a fragmented government can provoke
further capital flight, push borrowing costs, weaken the rupee, delay
economic recovery and make fiscal consolidation more difficult, Moody's
said.
The markets have been joyously welcoming
emergence of opinion polls showing a BJP victory over the past few
months and rising in the expectation of a Modi government, even though
the BJP has been opposing reform measures like FDI in organised retail.
"The
BJP's economic platform has emphasised increasing infrastructure
investment and the share of manufacturing in GDP, and its candidate for
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has a record of investment-friendly
policies in the state he governed," the Moody's note said.
Meanwhile,
in some positive news for the country, the rating agency today said the
country's vulnerability to a reduction in capital flows is limited due
to low proportion of debt in foreign currencies and is also long term.
"While
the country's debt is far larger than Indonesia's in GDP terms, the
long maturity, which averages nine years, and the very low proportion
denominated in foreign currency limits the country's vulnerability to a
reduction in capital inflows," Moody's said.
It also acknowledged
the measures taken by the country to fight the rapid depreciation in the
rupee in the aftermath of the US Fed's announcement to taper its
liquidity infusing asset buying programme.
vimal singh
pgdm 1st yr
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