*India's real economic growth will slow to 6% in 2009 from an annual average
expansion of 8% in the last five years, but the lagged effects of fiscal and
monetary steps will likely help boost the economy from July Standard &
Poor's said Friday.

"Assuming that the global economic crisis does not worsen, India's ongoing
monetary and fiscal stimulus packages, as well as a collapse in commodity
prices, are setting the stage for a pickup in the second-half of 2009," the
ratings agency said in a report.

The country's domestic demand, although slowing, and high savings rate will
continue to play a key role in funding economic activity, S&P said.

S&P forecasts India's economic growth will recover to 7.3% in 2010.

Although the government is left with little room to pump prime the economy,
the central bank is expected to continue its easy monetary stance as
inflation eases and industrial output growth slumps.

The inflation rate, measured by the wholesale price index, decelerated to
2.43% in the week ended Feb. 28, from 3.03% a week earlier, sharply lower
than the over 13-year high of 12.9% in August.

"Despite the reversal in interest rates, the growing economic uncertainty,
coupled with rising risk aversion among banks, should, in our view, continue
to exacerbate the downward pressure on industrial output in future," S&P
said. India's January industrial output growth shrank 0.5%, after
contracting 0.6% in December.

Since October, the Reserve Bank of India has lowered the repurchase rate by
400 basis points and the cash reserve ratio by an equal amount. The reverse
repurchase rate has been lowered by 250 basis points over the same period.

The federal government has cut factory levies by as much as 600 basis points
since December to boost economic activity, committed an additional
expenditure of INR200 billion and allowed overseas investors to buy more
corporate bonds as part of its stimulus packages.

But this has strained government finances, which are already under pressure
from large scale spending ahead of federal polls that start next month.

India's budgeted fiscal deficit will more than double to 6% in the current
fiscal year, which earlier prompted S&P cut its long-term sovereign credit
rating outlook to negative on India's BBB- long-term and A-3 short-term
ratings.

It has also warned that it may cut Asia's third largest economy's rating to
junk as the nation's fiscal position may be unsustainable in the medium
term.**http://tanmaygopal.blogspot.com/* <http://tanmaygopal.blogspot.com/>

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