India's economy set for more strong growth
Agriculture, which has pulled down the broader economy, fared better than expected during the first quarter, posting 3.8 per cent growth.
Last Friday's first-quarter data, driven by robust manufacturing and services output, surprised many analysts who had forecast growth as low as 8.5 per cent after five interest rate hikes in a year.
The aggressive monetary tightening and a stronger rupee, which has hit exports, means it is unlikely India will repeat last year's torrid 9.4 per cent expansion, the fastest in 18 years, analysts say.
But India's "growth story," which has prompted foreigners to pump billions of dollars into shares, infrastructure and other investments, remains intact.
Expansion is being "consumption led" with "rising incomes and a growing middle class" in the country of 1.1 billion people, said Deepak Lalwani, director at London investment house Astaire and Partners.
"The economy has gained its own strong momentum due to cumulative reforms," said Lalwani, who sees growth of 8.5-9.0 per cent in the fiscal year to March 2008.
Agriculture, which has pulled down the broader economy, also fared better than expected during the first quarter, posting 3.8 per cent growth.
While nine percent is at the upper end range of most full-year forecasts, economists have raised their expectations following the quarterly figures.
JP Morgan boosted its growth estimate from eight to 8.6 per cent and Morgan Stanley from 7.7 per cent to 7.8 per cent. India's HDFC bank said it was looking at "8.5 per cent plus" from an earlier 8.3 per cent. Other investment houses said they were considering hiking their forecasts.
Finance Minister P Chidambaram said he was "confident GDP growth will remain close to nine per cent this year" even though first-quarter growth was "a shade below" the 9.6 per cent expansion logged in the year-ago period.
India's economy, which has expanded by an average annual 8.6 per cent in the past three years, is the fastest growing after neighbouring China. China's economy expanded by a roaring 11.9 per cent in the second quarter.
Analysts say India's growth would cool in coming quarters as the central bank's tight money policy, which has pushed interest rates to five-year highs, crimps capacity expansion and hurts credit growth.
Sales of cars are already slowing due to higher loan costs and spending on consumer durables has fallen.
"There is some softness already in credit growth and rail freight and exports," said Abheek Barua, chief economist at HDFC Bank.
But the central bank is unlikely to ease its hawkish monetary policy stance rapidly.
"It does not seem likely the central bank will loosen rates in a hurry... (as) the economy continues to grow at an above trend pace," said Manika Premsingh at Edelweiss Capital brokerage.
The new inflation rate is far below the bank's annual target of "close" to five percent. But economists say the drop was mainly due to a high base effect from a year earlier when inflation stood at 5.6 per cent.
"The bank won't be lulled," said Soumitra Chaudhuri, economic advisor to credit rating agency ICRA.
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