India's Economy Faces 3-4 Year Setback from Geopolitical Turmoil: Bernstein

A Bernstein report warns that escalating US-Iran tensions and sustained high crude oil prices pose severe risks to India's macroeconomic stability. The analysis cautions that a prolonged shock could lead to double-digit inflation, a sharp rupee depreciation, and GDP growth tapering to 2-3%. External balances would come under pressure from a widening trade deficit, potentially delaying monetary easing. The firm concludes that sustained geopolitical stress has the potential to set back India's economic growth trajectory by three to four years.

Key Points: India's Growth at Risk from Geopolitical Shock, Warns Bernstein

  • Geopolitical tensions threaten growth
  • High crude risks double-digit inflation
  • Rupee could breach 110 per dollar
  • Rate cuts may be delayed by two quarters
2 min read

Geopolitical turmoil puts India's economy at risk of 3-4 Year setback: Bernstein

Bernstein report warns escalating US-Iran tensions & high crude prices could trigger inflation, rupee fall, and set back India's GDP growth by 3-4 years.

"a prolonged period of elevated crude and tighter external financing conditions could play out for India's macro. - Bernstein Report"

New Delhi, March 28

India's macro outlook faces rising risks amid escalating US-Iran tensions and a sustained spike in crude oil prices, noted a report by global equity research and brokerage firm Bernstein.

The report cautions that the current geopolitical shock could expose structural vulnerabilities in the Indian economy if it persists, noting that "a prolonged period of elevated crude and tighter external financing conditions could play out for India's macro."

Highlighting historical parallels, Bernstein warned of a potential "GFC moment," recalling that after the global financial crisis, "India's economic growth slipped from ~10% to 5%, inflation spiked to 10%, and rupee depreciated 30%."

The report underscored that crude remains a key pressure point, stating that "the crude price threatens to push inflation back above the tolerance range," while also flagging risks to growth and external balances.

In a worst-case scenario involving a prolonged conflict through 2026, Bernstein said the repercussions could be severe, including "double-digit inflation, economic growth in 2-3% range, rupee beyond 110 and nifty going well below 20,000."

Even under more moderate assumptions, the outlook remains challenging. The report expects "realistic chances of inflation breaching 6% this summer," which could delay monetary easing, with "rate cuts to get pushed for two quarters at the least, and GDP growth to taper."

On external accounts, elevated crude prices are likely to widen imbalances. Bernstein noted that "elevated crude and trade almost go hand in hand," potentially leading to a surge in the merchandise trade deficit and pressure on the current account.

Currency pressures are also building, with the report warning that "it is only a matter of time before 97-98 levels for the Rupee are breached" if hostilities persist.

Despite the possibility of near-term de-escalation, Bernstein emphasised that structural damage may already be underway, stating "a structural change has happened already," with crude unlikely to return to earlier low levels this year.

Summing up the broader impact, the report warned that sustained geopolitical stress could materially hit growth, with "the potential to set back the growth by 3-4 years," adding that even in less severe scenarios, the environment could "shelve a full percentage point off the annual GDP growth."

Bernstein maintained a cautious stance on markets, advising that "waiting out for clear signals, in such times, is often the best strategy," amid elevated uncertainty driven by geopolitics rather than fundamentals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Scary to think inflation could go back to 10% and the rupee to 110. My household budget is already stretched thin with vegetable prices. Hope the RBI and finance ministry are preparing contingency plans. The common citizen will bear the brunt.
R
Rohit P
While the risks are real, reports like these sometimes overstate the doom. India's fundamentals are stronger than in 2008. Forex reserves are high, and we are less dependent on foreign flows. Let's not panic but be prudent.
S
Sarah B
Working in exports, I can already feel the pressure. Clients are getting nervous, and currency volatility makes pricing a nightmare. Bernstein's "wait and see" advice for markets seems wise, but for businesses on the ground, it's a very stressful time.
V
Vikram M
The core issue remains our oil import dependency. All this talk of becoming a $5 trillion economy means nothing if a conflict thousands of miles away can derail us for 3-4 years. Time to double down on renewables and electric vehicles, not just for the environment but for economic survival.
K
Karthik V
A respectful criticism: Our media and leaders often highlight only the positive growth stories. We need more honest, public discussions about these structural vulnerabilities. Preparing the public for potential hardship is better than sudden shock.
M
Michael C

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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