The agency pegged the final fiscal deficit print at 4.2 per cent, against the budget promise of 4.1 per cent, despite the 10 per cent spending cut announced last week. In the first six months of the fiscal, fiscal deficit touched 83 per cent of the target.
The agency, which is backed by international rating agency Fitch, revised down the GDP forecast to 5.6 per cent from the earlier 5.7 per cent in August.
The agency maintained the agricultural growth projection at 1.3 percent, which experts say will be limited by the weak monsoon. However, it revised up the growth projection for the services sector, which contributes over 65 percent to GDP, by 10 bps to 7.1 per cent.
The country has had two consecutive years of sub-5 percent growth, which jumped to 5.7 percent in the first quarter of the fiscal. However, due to a continued slump in the monthly industrial output data, analysts expect the upcoming September quarter growth at 5 percent levels.
On the fiscal deficit, India Ratings said even though factors like declining oil subsidy on a fall in global crude prices are giving us succour, a slow growth in the tax revenues would likely result in the government over-shooting its 4.1 per cent target and we will close FY15 with a 4.2 per cent gap.
The agency said the recent move to deregulate diesel, which was caused largely by the decline in international crude prices, will help save Rs 15,000 crore in oil subsidy in FY15.
It said the average consumer price inflation for the entire fiscal will come in at 7.8 per cent, as against the 9.5 per cent in the year-ago period.
