City
Epaper

'India's economic indicators show re-acceleration'

By IANS | Updated: February 28, 2023 11:40 IST

Chennai, Feb 28 The Indian economic indicators have started showing re-acceleration after a slowdown post festive season in ...

Open in App

Chennai, Feb 28 The Indian economic indicators have started showing re-acceleration after a slowdown post festive season in October 2022, said Morgan Stanley.

In a report, Morgan Stanley said the growth indicators for India had slowed post the festive season in October in a fairly broad-based manner raising investors' concern.

"However, growth indicators have started to show signs of re-acceleration in early 2023," it notes.

According to Morgan Stanley, healthy household balance sheets and a pickup in private and public capex will sustain gains in employment which will allow consumption growth to stay strong in the coming quarters.

"Government policies are still very much geared towards reviving private investment, which we expect will continue to unfold as strong trailing demand has already lifted capacity utilisation," the report notes.

The Indian budget for FY24 was another step in the right direction to crowd in private investment.

As regards China's growth, Morgan Stanley expects its economy to grow by 5.7 per cent this year, with much of the growth recovery underpinned by a revival in consumer spending.

Consumption is expected to grow by 8.3 per cent in 2023 after two per cent growth in 2022.

"However, investors are still somewhat sceptical about a consumption-led rebound as that has not typically been the key driver to a growth recovery in China. Moreover, they are also concerned that the consumers might choose to hoard their excess savings rather than spend it, given that the excess saving was accumulated through unspent consumption rather than through government transfers," Morgan Stanley said.

The Chinese growth recovery will benefit Japan in the form of increased tourist arrivals and goods export. In 2019, 30 per cent of Japan tourists arrived from China and about 19 per cent of its exports were to China, Morgan Stanley said.

In recent weeks, high-frequency data suggests improvement in Chinese tourist arrivals into Japan has picked up, having likely raised to 18 per cent of its pre-Covid levels as of the week of February 21, the report notes.

Similarly, the Korean economy that contracted sequentially in 4Q22 with broad-based weakness across all expenditure components is expected to benefit from China's revival.

According to Morgan Stanley, Korean exports will have a modest recovery if there is pickup in China.

In the case of Indonesia, the demand indicators are fairly strong and the fall in the commodity prices is not much as the export prices are still 30-200 per cent higher than where they were before Covid.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indiachennaiMorgan StanleyIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia indiaGia indiaMadras missionIndia eu
Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraOver 10,000 Pakistani Nationals Traced in Maharashtra and Delhi Post-Palgham Terror Attack

National‘Question Kunal Kamra In Chennai’: Bombay HC To Police; Grants Protection From Arrest

MumbaiViral Sighting of Tesla Cybertruck Near Mumbai Stirs EV Enthusiasm (Photos)

NationalGold Price on April 22: Rate for 10 Grams of Yellow Metal Hits All-Time High Ahead of Akshaya Tritiya

NationalChennai: Man Saves Schoolboy from Electrocution in Waterlogged Street; Video Goes Viral

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndian diaspora in France condemns Pahalgam terror attack, warns Pakistan

InternationalNetanyahu says elimination of Hezbollah leader 'smashed Iranian axis'

InternationalUkraine's frontline situation remains difficult, Zelenskyy calls for "more tangible pressure on Russia"

InternationalThousands of Pakistani pilgrims to miss out on Hajj 2025 due to limited quota

InternationalUkraine offers condolences to Canada after "heartbreaking" Vancouver festival tragedy