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India GDP to Slow Down Marginally, But Remain Strong at 7.5% in 2019 & 2020: OECD

India ’s economic growth will slow down somewhat but remain robust, at close to 7.50% in 2019 and 2020, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has said. India’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 6.7% in 2017-18. OECD projects GDP at market prices to grow 7.3% in 2019 and 7.4% in 2020 from 7.5% in 2018. “Economic growth will slow somewhat but remain robust, at close to 7.5% in 2019 and 2020,” the Paris-based organisation said for India in its 2018 Economic Outlook. Tighter financial conditions, higher oil prices, adverse terms of trade, lower growth in partner countries, and rising political uncertainties in India and abroad will tend to reduce growth, it said. The Reserve Bank of India expects FY19 growth at 7.4%. Global credit rating agency Moody's Investors Service has projected India’s economic growth to moderate to 7.3% in 2019 and 2020 as higher oil prices combined with rupee depreciation and monetary tightening dampen domestic demand. OECD said t

Allow Audit Firms to Offer Legal Services: MCA Panel

Bats for development of multi-disciplinary practice firms; law firms oppose proposal An expert panel constituted by the ministry of corporate affairs (MCA) has recommended that Advocates Act be amended to allow audit firms to offer legal services, a proposal which is being opposed by law firms.The MCA panel, which was set up to look into the regulation of audit firms and their networks, is of the view that development of multi-disciplinary practice (MDP) firms should be facilitated in the country, and to meet this goal, auditors should be allowed to expand their portfolio of services. “For Indian firms to evolve into global leaders in auditing, legal, consultancy, and ancillary services, it is necessary to rationalise the Advocate Act 1961 to facilitate development of Indian audit firms as well as legal firms,” stated the panel’s report. The report states that in 2015, the Society of Indian Law Firms had complained to the Delhi Bar Council against the ‘Big 4’ — PwC, Deloitte, KPM

Govt, RBI may Clash Over NBFC Liquidity

Sparks are set to fly at the Reserve Bank of India board meeting on Monday as the government and the regulator may clash over necessity for a special liquidity window for non-banking finance companies (NBFCs), although the two are likely to step back from the brink on other issues, said three people familiar with the matter.  Worried about NBFCs having frozen lending due to fears of a liquidity crunch, the government is determined to break the logjam that’s causing a credit squeeze for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which employ millions, said the people. “Housing sales have almost stalled,” said one of them. “First, bank credit was denied, and now NBFCs have also stopped.” The 18-member board headed by governor Urjit Patel will meet in Mumbai to debate numerous issues, including the current liquidity position, easing of lending norms for banks under the Reserve Bank’s prompt corrective action, and the transfer of excess reserves to the government.  Relations have Det

Will RBI and the govt bury the hatchet?

RBI and government representatives are therefore likely to make presentations on some of these issues, highlighting the impact of these changes on the banking sector,” said one of the board members on condition of anonymity.  RBI’s central board currently has 18 members, including five full-time directors from the central bank. It has two government representatives, which include secretaries from the departments of economic affairs and financial services.  Lending hope to the idea of a deal are the comments made last week by Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh ideologue and RBI central board director S. Gurumurthy. “As my understanding goes, the government is only asking for a formulation of a policy as to how much reserve the central bank must have. Most central banks don’t have reserves of this kind at all, only RBI has these kinds of reserves,” he said on 15 November in an address at the Vivekananda International Foundation.  However, another person familiar with the developments in RBI

RBI Board may Decide to Set up a Committee on Capital Framework

The Reserve Bank of India board meeting on November 19 may decide to set up a high-level committee to decide on its capital framework, among the key reasons for the conflict between the regulator and the Centre, said several people familiar with the matter, downplaying expectations of a showdown.  The possibility of the board giving any direction with regard to the actual transfer of RBI reserves to the government looks remote as the RBI Act does not permit this, they said. “The board can lay down rules but cannot decide on a case-to-case basis,” said former financial services secretary DK Mittal, adding that the rules regarding the quantum of reserves to be held had been decided by the board. “The board has to take a balanced stand now. Both the government and RBI should behave responsibly.” Mittal was a member of the board by virtue of his position. The reserves are meant for unforeseen contingencies, including depreciation in the value of securities, risks arising from exchang

Sebi may Tighten Liquid MF Rules

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is considering a proposal to tighten rules for liquid mutual funds holding assets worth ?8 lakh crore or more to curb volatility in flows following the challenges facing finance companies in the wake of the debt default by Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS).  The capital market regulator is planning a short lock-in period for investments in liquid funds, in which investors — mostly large companies — park idle cash. Sebi may also make it mandatory for liquid funds to mark to market the value of more bonds and allow segregation of debt instruments in mutual fund portfolios that are in trouble, said three people aware of the development. These measures are likely to be discussed at the Sebi-appointed mutual fund advisory committee meeting on Monday.  A lock-in period, aimed at reducing volatility in flows, could reduce the popularity of the product among institutional investors, experts said.  Most banks churn

Enrolment mostly covered, UIDAI to focus on updates

More than eight years after successfully launching the Aadhaar project, India’s unique identity authority (UIDAI) is looking at effecting a major “operational shift” from enrolment to large-scale data updates in order to ensure the long-term success of the scheme, according to an official note by the authority.  Set up in 2009 through a government notification, UIDAI has been generating the 12-digit unique identity number, called Aadhaar, since 2010.  As on September 30, more than 1.12 billion Aadhaar numbers have been generated. As per UIDAI data, Delhi, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Goa, Kerala, Punjab, Chandigarh and Telangana have more than 100% saturation till October 31, while Sikkim has the lowest saturation at 87%. Hundred per cent saturation means the entire population of a city has been covered in terms of Aadhaar enrolment. It exceeds 100% when there is a migrant population availing of the service. “In these states, UIDAI needs to undertake an operational shift from enrolme