RPT-India fiscal stimulus to stay, summer crop seen down
(Repeats story issued late on Tuesday)
* India will maintain fiscal stimulus
* Summer-sown grain seen down 18 pct on year
* Fiscal prudence needed says finmin
* Return to 9 pct growth could take a year
By Tony Munroe and Rajkumar Ray
NEW DELHI, Nov 3 (Reuters) - India will maintain its fiscal stimulus due to uncertainty arising from a poor monsoon and the global outlook, the finance minister said on Tuesday, as data showed the summer crop could post a bigger-than-expected fall.
But Pranab Mukherjee also said there were distinct signs of pick-up in Asia's third-largest economy, with banks told to boost lending as non-farm credit growth remained an area of concern.
"For the present I maintain that the fiscal stimulus will have to continue, to allow its impact to fully run through the economy," Mukherjee told the annual Economic Editors conference.
"It is, however, an imperative to come back to the path of fiscal prudence, as soon as the current economic circumstances permit us to do so."
India's economic growth slowed to 6.7 percent in the 2008/09 fiscal year through March after three straight years of at least 9 percent, and government officials have said growth in the current year is on track for roughly 6.5 percent.
Government data showed the summer-sown grain harvest could fall 18 percent from a year ago, after the worst monsoon in 37 years damaged sugar cane, rice and oilseeds.
Cane production in the world's largest consumer of sugar is set to fall nearly 9 percent, the government's first estimates of the summer-sown crop harvest showed.
Mukherjee said returning the economy to growth of 9 percent would take more than a year, adding that the poor monsoon and then floods in some parts of the country had obvious implications for agriculture and food prices.
FISCAL PRUDENCE AND REFORMS
The finance minister's comments came a week after the central bank laid the groundwork for a rise in interest rates by tightening credit to the commercial property sector, lifting its inflation forecast and warning of asset price bubbles. Continued...

