ADB to increase India lending by 50% to $12 bn by 2018

Answering question on India's growth prospects, Nakao said the country's growth rate is expected to exceed that of China in this year.

New Delhi: Asian Development Bank proposes to increase lending to India by almost 50 percent to USD 12 billion by 2018, ADB President Takehiko Nakao said on Tuesday.

"ADB aims at increasing its sovereign and non-sovereign lending from the present USD 7 billion-USD 9 billion in three years from 2015 to 2017 to USD 10 billion-USD 12 billion between 2016 and 2018 using ADB?s expanded lending capacity," he said.

He was talking to reporters here after meeting Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and Urban Development Minister Venkaiah Naidu.

"We are now targeting higher numbers... We will increase the numbers by about 50 percent or little bit less but roughly we will try to increase lending to India by about 50 percent," said the ADB chief.

ADB's annual lending capacity, he added, is expected to increase to as much as USD 20 billion a year from the current level of USD 13 billion based on the merger of its Asian Development Fund lending operations with its Ordinary Capital Resources balance sheet.

Answering question on India's growth prospects, Nakao said the country's growth rate is expected to exceed that of China in this year.

India's projected growth rate of 7.8 percent for the 2015-16 fiscal is higher than China's estimated 7.2 percent in 2015 calender year, he said.

ADB is expected to revise its growth projections for the current fiscal in July, Nakao said.

He added: "ADB's latest economic outlook for India published in March projects GDP growth of 7.8 percent in FY 2015-16, rising to 8.2 percent in the 2016-17.

"The strong growth outlook is backed by good macroeconomic indicators such as a decline in inflation and the current account deficit, and reforms to further open up certain sectors for foreign direct investment and reduce fuel subsidies. Efforts to expedite clearances for key infrastructure projects will also sustain growth momentum."

Answering questions on the interest rates, Nakao made a case for further rate cut by the Reserve Bank saying it should be linked to the inflation numbers.

"7.25 percent (policy repo rate) is still not excessively low...If inflation rate is lower of course interest rate can come down" he said, adding that he did not want to "predict monetary policy of India".

RBI has cut benchmark interest rate by a total of 0.75 percent in three tranches since January. As regards the wholesale inflation, it has been in the negative territory for the past seven months.

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