Goldman Sachs expects most of the infrastructure investment to be funded by India's domestic savings without significant recourse to external borrowings. This belief stems from the trend of rising domestic savings rate and robust balance sheets of private sector companies. Goldman Sachs has pegged the gross savings rate in Asia's third largest economy to rise to 40% of GDP by 2016 (from 37% in FY09) and remain at high levels for well over a decade. These savings will be pertinent to fund public private partnership (PPP) projects that are estimated to fund 30% to 50% of the total infrastructure investment in the next decade. However, what is even more important to note is that for this plan to fructify, India's household savings must be intermediated through the financial sector (pension funds, insurance and the like) to the government, which then spends on infrastructure. Else, as the chart shows, rising savings could possibly have little or no impact on public sector / infrastructure investments.
Allowing institutions like IIFCL to raise funds through long term bonds or allowing the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) to route investments from pension funds to equity and debt markets for the long term could be ideal ways to tap the potential savings.
India's infrastructure buildup and financing thus presents enormous opportunities, not just for producers of capital goods, developers and raw material providers, but also for financial intermediaries.
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