Rising COVID-19 Cases Early Hints of 4th Wave, Will Not Impact Growth in Near-Term, Says Nomura
The potential fourth wave is a risk to monitor, it said, adding that the economic sensitivity to future waves should also wane. The brokerage's activity normalisation index shows a broad-based improvement in activity in March, and when one excludes services which are rising fast after the third wave, all other key sectors have surpassed their pre-pandemic levels.
Mumbai, April 29: Rising cases are "early hints" of a fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic but do not pose any near-term risk to India's economic growth, a Japanese brokerage said on Friday. However from a medium-term perspective, there are headwinds for growth like high inflation, weak private capex and slower global growth, Nomura said in a report.
"Near-term growth should be supported by continued normalisation as services catch up and due to lagged effects of easy monetary policy and government capex. However, high inflation, weak private capex and slower global growth are medium-term negatives," its analysts wrote.
The brokerage has recently lowered India's real GDP growth forecast to 7.4 per cent in FY23, down from the 8.4 per cent it expects the economy to clock in FY22. COVID-19 cases are starting to pick up, with the 7-day moving average of daily cases up to 2,800 per day as on April 29 from less than 1,000 in mid-April, it said, adding that these are "early hints of a fourth wave".
"It is too early to view this as a significant downside risk for growth, because economies are learning to live with the virus; newer variants are infectious but not as deadly; and there is reduced public and policy appetite for a return of serious restrictions," it said. India Records 3,377 Fresh COVID-19 Cases, Active Caseload Rise to 17,801.
The potential fourth wave is a risk to monitor, it said, adding that the economic sensitivity to future waves should also wane. The brokerage's activity normalisation index shows a broad-based improvement in activity in March, and when one excludes services which are rising fast after the third wave, all other key sectors have surpassed their pre-pandemic levels.
Aggregate demand and aggregate supply now stand at 15 percentage points and 9 percentage points above pre-pandemic levels. Consumption is 3 percentage points higher, investment is percentage points higher and industry is 4.5 percentage points higher. But the services sector – the worst hit from the restrictions so far – remains around 10 percentage points below pre-pandemic levels, the brokerage said.