Moody’s Investors Service has said India’s credit profile would improve if it follows the fiscal discipline path and set up a fiscal council as recommended by the FRBM panel.

The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Committee in its report has suggested that the fiscal deficit, which is the difference between expenditure and receipts, should be brought down to 2.5 per cent by 2022-23 from 3.2 per cent in the current fiscal.

The recommendations offer a medium-term framework that focuses on fiscal consolidation, while targeting India’s debt-to-GDP ratio as a fiscal anchor, Moody’s Investors Service India sovereign analyst William Foster said.

“An effective implementation of fiscal discipline within a framework consistent with the FRBM’s recommendation and supported by the set-up of a fiscal council would point to a lower debt burden over time and would support India’s credit profile,” Foster said in a statement.

Former Revenue Secretary N K Singh-headed panel has also recommended bringing down the Centre’s debt-GDP ratio to 40 per cent by 2023 from 49 per cent at present.

The combined Centre and State Government debt to GDP ratio stands at 68.5 per cent.

Rating agencies have often red flagged high debt-GDP ratio of India.

Government borrows money from market to fund the fiscal deficit, thereby increasing public debt.

Moody’s has a ‘Baa3’ rating on India with a positive outlook.

Among other things, the FRBM committee wanted the existing FRBM Act 2003 to be replaced by a new Debt and Fiscal Responsibility Act and suggested setting up of a ‘fiscal council’ to provide forecast and analysis of fiscal deficit as well advise the Finance Ministry on escape clauses.

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