“Indian external sector continues to face the headwinds emanating from the global slowdown. However, the downside to a widening current account deficit is expected to be limited by a robust services export performance through the rest of the year and by inward remittances, which are expected to touch $100 billion this fiscal year as per the World Bank,” the report stated.
The report said that inflationary pressures have been easing, with retail and wholesale inflation falling to eleven- and 21-month lows, respectively, in November.
“WPI inflation rate continues to decline, and CPI inflation rate came in below the RBI’s upper tolerance limit of 6 per cent, primarily driven by the decline in food inflation. Core inflation, however, continues to remain sticky and persisted at an elevated level of 6 per cent in November 2022, partially reflecting increased pass-through of high manufacturing costs to consumer prices as demand continues to recover swiftly,” it said.