Sonal Varma, managing director, chief economist-India and Asia ex-Japan, Nomura says that with China facing economic headwinds, India and Southeast Asia are likely to attract investors with an improving business landscape, supply chain relocations, and new growth opportunities in AI and green energy
Sonal Varma, managing director, chief economist-India and Asia ex-Japan, Nomura, raises concerns of a possible economic slowdown in India in the next 6-12 months as investment and consumption are likely to remain lacklustre amidst global headwinds. “Past episodes of global downturn have disrupted not just India’s export cycle, but also its capex cycle, and the lagged effects of the RBI’s rate hikes have also yet to reflect on domestic growth,” Varma explains in an exclusive interview with Forbes India.
But Varma believes Asia is entering a sweet spot after a challenging year of declining exports led by semiconductors, anaemic growth in China, a steep rise in commodity prices, and unprecedented rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve. Although the near-term growth outlook is weak, Varma argues that evolving conditions are supportive for a medium-term growth rebound as exports are bottoming out and terms of trade are improving due to lower oil prices and easing inflation.
Furthermore, the veteran economist says India and Southeast Asia will replace China as the main growth drivers this decade. Unlike Western economies, Asia is likely to see a stronger and faster recovery, once global headwinds subside, due to relatively stronger fundamentals: “We believe a confluence of global push and regional pull factors are aligning and investors will look for new opportunities, place a higher premium on sustainable growth; we think Asia fits the bill,” Varma adds. Edited excerpts:
Q. GDP growth of 7.2 percent in FY23 wasn’t broad-based and there were several statistical base effects at play due to the impact of the pandemic, plus, GDP CAGR over FY19 has been only 2.7 percent. How tangible and sustainable is India's growth recovery?
From a cyclical standpoint, the next 6-12 months we see a slowdown ahead for the Indian economy. We expect FY24 GDP growth of 5.5 percent versus 7.2 percent in FY23. The higher consensus forecast appears to be underpinned by relatively muted impact from the global downturn, sustained buoyancy in services—including services exports, continued push on public capex and receding inflationary pressures. We remain less sanguine on the ability of the Indian economy to bypass the incoming global headwinds. As DM (developed market) central banks keep rates at restrictive territory, and with weaker China growth offering lesser counterbalance, we believe global growth slowdown will continue. Our US economics team is forecasting a three-quarter long recession starting in the second half of 2023. Past episodes of global downturn have disrupted not just India’s export cycle, but also its capex cycle. Meanwhile, the lagged effects of the RBI’s rate hikes have also yet to reflect on domestic growth.