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  Business   In Other News  09 May 2018  Business sentiment weakest since 2014, says study

Business sentiment weakest since 2014, says study

FINANCIAL CHRONICLE
Published : May 9, 2018, 11:32 am IST
Updated : May 9, 2018, 11:32 am IST

India slipped to the sixth position globally in the business optimism index.

India slipped to the sixth position globally in the business optimism index for the first quarter of this year.
 India slipped to the sixth position globally in the business optimism index for the first quarter of this year.

New Delhi: With business sentiment at the “weakest” in four years, India slipped to the sixth position globally in the business optimism index for the first quarter of this year, says a survey.

Business optimism is however at an “all-time high” globally with the index at net 61 per cent, the highest figure recorded in 15 years of research, as per Grant Thornton’s quarterly global business survey released on Tuesday.

Noting that business sentiment in India has been the weakest since 2014 in the first quarter, the advisory firm said the confidence has been shaken since the third quarter of 2017 with weakening currency and a surge in oil prices.

“While entering the last year of the current regime, the business optimism in India has deteriorated with the country ranking sixth globally on the optimism index in the first quarter of 2018,” Grant Thornton’s International Business Report said.

“India has been topping the chart since the new government came into power in 2014,” the report said.  With a score of 89, India is at the sixth place in the index. The top five nations are Austria, Finland, Indonesia, the Netherlands and the US. The conclusions are based on a quarterly global business survey of 2,500 businesses in 37 economies.

With regard to India, Grant Thornton said the underlying pessimism is reflected in other parameters as well including revenue, selling prices, profitability, employment and exports expectations. Indian businesses have been citing regulations and red tape, availability of skilled workforce, lack of ICT infrastructure and shortage of finance as the biggest growth constraints.

Even after India’s significant jump in World Bank’s ease of doing business ranking, the country still continues to rank first or second in quoting these reasons as the key hurdles for growth, it noted.

Grant Thornton India CEO Vishesh C Chandiok said the reversal in sentiment among mid-sized business in the last three quarters is startling and hoped that policy makers would sit up and take note.

With oil climbing, and India firmly in an election year, we ought to brace for a volatile economic environment in the days ahead. Export oriented businesses should see better days, finally,” he added.

Tags: business optimism, global business, oil prices, workforce, ease of doing business
Location: India, Delhi, New Delhi