Narendra Modi’s first term as leader of the world’s fastest-growing oil market coincided with the biggest price crash in a generation. Crude’s rebound into a bull market is set to test the Indian prime minister as he gears up for re-election in 2019.

While low prices helped shrink deficits as Modi cut subsidies after taking the reins of Asia’s third-largest economy in 2014, a 33 per cent jump in global benchmark crude since June has lifted oil close to $65 a barrel. If it hits and stays at that level in the year through March, inflation could rise by 30 basis points and a key measure of growth may weaken by 15 basis points, the central bank estimates.

That threat is ill-timed for Modi. His government’s grappling with weaker economic growth that’s forecast to slow to a four-year low in the wake of an unprecedented cash ban and the chaotic roll out of a goods and services tax. How he tackles oil’s surge will determine the credibility of criticism that he got lucky with low crude prices, a refrain he’s rebutted. Data due Monday will probably show inflation quickened to a seven-month high in October.

“For a net oil importer like India, a sustained rise in crude oil prices would have adverse macroeconomic implications,” Sonal Varma, chief India economist at Nomura Holdings, said in a report last week. “Higher oil prices are tantamount to negative terms-of-trade shock that weakens growth, pushes up inflation and deteriorates the twin deficits.”

Oil’s jump is expected to push the yield on India’s 10-year government bond to a 2017 high of 7pc from 6.93pc on Thursday. Consumer prices rose 3.4pc in October from a year earlier, according to the median estimate of 13 economists, quickening from September’s 3.28pc pace.

That means the Reserve Bank of India will have less room to lower interest rates and spur flagging growth.

When Modi was sworn in as prime minister in May 2014, after promising in his campaign to introduce market-friendly policies and boost economic growth, global benchmark Brent crude was trading at more than $100 a barrel. The very next month, crude began a descent that dragged it down all the way to below $30 in early 2016 amid concern over a global glut and surging US shale production.

That collapse helped Modi during the first two years of his five-year term, giving him the leeway to cut subsidies on diesel and cooking gas, a move that may have been politically unpopular if oil weren’t so low. Now, oil’s rising as Opec and allies including Russia curb output to clear the global oversupply, while the Indian rupee is weakening against the dollar. Both are risks for Sankaran Naren, chief investment officer at ICICI Prudential Asset Management Co., the country’s largest money manager.

As crude rallied, the government last month moved to cut taxes on gasoline and diesel. The decision was triggered by a public outcry and is estimated to cause a 130 billion-rupee loss to government revenue in the current fiscal year. Meanwhile, the economic slowdown has re-energised Modi’s political opposition.

Bloomberg-The Washington Post Service

Published in Dawn, November 11th, 2015

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