India finds it hard to match China's fiscal firepower

India finds it hard to match China's fiscal firepower

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New Delhi: India has little scope for a big bang fiscal stimulus package like China's $586 billion (Dh2,154 billion) plan and will hope instead populist spending plans outlined earlier this year can help it ride out the global financial storm.

India's federal and state fiscal deficit is likely to top 7 per cent of gross domestic product, one of the highest in the world, and the federal deficit is already projected to blow its 2.5 per cent target, leaving the emerging giant with little leeway to ramp up spending, analysts said.

What limits India's fiscal firepower is off-budget liabilities, such as the government bonds issued to refineries to keep down retail oil prices, which economists say feed into the broader deficit and total about 5 per cent of GDP.

"With the fiscal deficit all set to expand beyond the budgeted target for 2008-09 there is hardly any room for further fiscal stimulus to pump prime the economy," said D.K. Joshi, principal economist at ratings agency Crisil.

India has been striving to achieve the sort of double-digit growth that has made China the world's fastest-growing major economy, drawing inevitable comparisons on the performance of the two.

New spending package

While India lacks fiscal ammunition, China approved a new government spending package on Sunday equivalent to about 15 per cent of its GDP to ride out the financial crisis.

One of the few nations that can still afford fiscal pump-priming, China's move comes amid mounting evidence that the United States, Japan, the Euro area and other developed nations are in recession, putting greater onus on Asia's emerging giants to be a source of growth.

Policy makers globally are looking at fiscal stimulus as the next step to help their economies through the crisis following a barrage of bank bailouts to keep the financial system afloat and more lately cuts in interest rates.

After growing into a $1 trillion economy, India is feeling the effect of the global turmoil in its lending and property markets.

Industries, particularly car makers, are being pinched by a slowdown in demand, which was already underway because of a rise in interest rates earlier this year to calm inflationary pressures.

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