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Rediff.com  » Business » Citi report bullish on India

Citi report bullish on India

By Nistula Hebbar in New Delhi
October 23, 2004 15:57 IST
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Prime Minister Manmohan Singh got support from unexpected quarters with a report by Citigroup Smith and Barney predicting a stable economic environment, although only till 2006, when West Bengal and Kerala go to polls.

According to their market outlook report, which was published on October 6, "sentiment on politics has improved since May."

The report says that long-term danger to India's economic prospects is represented not by economics - "near term hiccups like inflation and agriculture but long term growth story is strong" - but by politics as it will emerge after 2006 when the Left parties will clash with the Congress in the Assembly elections.

The report further goes on to say that the "ability to perform has surprised on the upside, but stability will remain a factor in the coming months."

The government itself feels that its stability has improved since the Maharashtra poll results and would prefer to cross the 2006 assembly election bridge when it comes.

The report gives full marks to Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister P Chidambaram for pushing reforms, some of which are "politically unpalatable to their allies" the Left.

These include allowing oil companies to raise petrol/diesel prices by a price band mechanism and introduction of transaction tax on securities.

The demarcation between governance and politics made between the prime minister and Congress president Sonia Gandhi has also been given a thumbs up by the market.

It is however, the differences between the Congress and the Left on key economic issues, which comes in for detailed study, although the government has been commended for managing to push through key reforms.

The Left's earlier opposition to foreign direct investment in civil aviation has been chalked down to "the Left parties having to appease the unions, while the telecom FDI being stalled on issues of national security were brought up by the government's own allies."

On fiscal policy too, there is difference of opinion with the Left of the view that expenditure could be higher but the "PM and FM maintain their view that there should be fiscal discipline." The pressures of coalition politics are also expected to push up expenditure on various welfare and other programmes. 

Singh who just managed to push through important changes in FDI caps, will be heartened by the report. The memory of the stock market crash after the National Democratic Alliance lost elections is on its way to being a faded memory.

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Nistula Hebbar in New Delhi
 

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