DeMo to cut tax
avoidance, corruption; credit positive:
Moody's
Besides, it said, the country remains resilient to economic disruption
and the worst of the liquidity crunch has passed, which should support a
rebound in consumption and investment.
DeMo to cut tax avoidance, corruption; credit positive: Moodys
Demonetisation will be credit positive for India as it is likely to
reduce tax avoidance and corruption, Moody's Investors Service said
today.
Besides, it said, the country remains resilient to economic disruption
and the worst of the liquidity crunch has passed, which should support a
rebound in consumption and investment.
The US-based agency however projected growth to slow to 6.4 percent in
the January-March quarter, from 7 percent in the previous three months.
"Looking ahead, we expect remonetisation to continue at a similar pace,"
Moody's said in its report on demonetisation.
"We continue to believe that in the medium term demonetisation will
strengthen India's institutional framework by reducing tax avoidance and
corruption. It should also result in efficiency gains through greater formalisation of economic and financial activity, which would help
broaden the tax base and expand usage of the financial system.
"All this would be credit positive for the sovereign," it said.
The agency said that if most of the old notes are deposited into the
banking system, legitimising previously undeclared incomes and wealth,
the benefits to the government related to higher future tax collection
will accrue from measures aimed at leveraging the information obtained
when notes were deposited.
"Such measures have yet to be detailed," it added.
Moody's said however that demonetisation has hit bank's asset quality
and demand for credit. "This trend is likely to continue over the next
few months. We also expect asset quality to deteriorate in the current
quarter, but Indian banks have sufficient buffers to withstand the
impact." More positively, banks have experienced significant deposit
inflows as a result of demonetisation, it said.
"However, we expect bank deposits to increase by only around 1-2
percent, with cash remaining the dominant means of retail transactions,"
it added.
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