India's exports are expected to
grow by 7.2 per cent in 2013-2014 on the back of improvement in growth of developed markets.
"We expect export growth of 7.2 per cent in fiscal year 2014 versus minus one per cent in fiscal 2013," Morgan Stanley said in a report on Asia Pacific Economics.
The investment bank's research report expected gold imports to decline due to quantitative controls put in place by the government as well as increase in real rates as
inflation expectations moderate. "We estimate that quantitative control along with increase in real rates will help to reduce gold import demand in this fiscal to around $42 billion in fiscal 2014."
Non-oil and non-gold imports would remain very weak as tight monetary and fiscal policy would keep domestic demand weak. However, acceleration in exports can lead to some increase due to import content in exports, it pointed out.
Morgan Stanley also noted
Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) efforts on portfolio equity and debt flows.
"The recent steps taken by the RBI to augment capital flows by providing a swap window facility to allow banks to swap non-resident deposits and overseas borrowing at a lower cost have mitigated the funding pressure to some extent in the near term. Indeed, we expect these measures to help increase capital flows by about $15 billion in fiscal 2014 and thus we estimate only a marginal balance of payment deficit in our base case," said bank's report said.
However, the key variable that would influence overall capital flows would be portfolio flows into debt and equity, Morgan Stanley said.
But a prolonged growth slowdown could potentially lead to a continued balance of payments stress, implying that RBI would face the impossible trinity of managing the exchange rate and controlling the interest rates when capital flows would be volatile, the report added.
The report also highlighted that India would be impacted by the rise in the US rates and the US dollar.
"India will be significantly exposed to the trend of a rising US dollar and real rates through the current account imbalance, moderate dependence on foreign debt funding and upward pressure in its real rates," it said.
It said the economic growth would remain weaker for longer period. The three key risks arising from longer-duration slowdown would be the sharp rise in non-performing assets in banking system, challenges in managing fiscal deficit and the external funding risks would remain high.