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İran Savaşı Hindistan Ekonomisine Ağır Maliyet Yüklüyor

Hindistan ekonomisi, birkaç ay öncesine kadar dünyanın en güçlü büyüme performansını sergilerken, şimdi İran savaşının artan maliyetleriyle karşı karşıya. Dünyanın üçüncü büyük petrol ithalatçısı olan ülke, ABD ile İran arasındaki kilitlenmenin sürmesi ve petrol arzındaki tıkanıklığın devam etmesi halinde ekonomik yükün daha da ağırlaşacağını belirtiyor. Enflasyonun düşük ve büyümenin istikrarlı olduğu dönemden hızla uzaklaşan Hindistan, enerji maliyetlerindeki yükselişle birlikte bütçe dengesinde de zorlanmalar yaşıyor. Jeopolitik risklerin tırmandığı bu süreçte, İran savaşı yalnızca bölgesel değil, küresel enerji piyasalarını da etkileyerek petrol fiyatlarında keskin dalgalanmalara yol açıyor. Hindistan gibi ithalata bağımlı ekonomiler, bu tür şoklara karşı kırılgan bir konumda bulunuyor. Uzmanlar, çatışmaların uzaması durumunda ülkenin cari açığının genişleyebileceği ve ekonomik toparlanmanın sekteye uğrayabileceği uyarısında bulunuyor. ABD ve İran arasındaki diplomatik çıkmazın aşılması, petrol akışının normale dönmesi açısından kritik önem taşıyor. Hindistan’ın enerji güvenliği ve mali istikrarı, büyük ölçüde bu tıkanıklığın ne kadar süreceğine bağlı. Gelişmeler, yükselen piyasa ekonomileri için enerji arzındaki kesintilerin yaratabileceği domino etkisini bir kez daha gözler önüne seriyor.

Başlangıç 09 Haz 09:30 1 olay Güncellendi 4 gün önce
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  1. Ekonomik09 Haz 09:30

    Indian economy, govt finances see mounting costs from Iran war

    A few months ago, India’s economy was humming along nicely. Inflation was benign and growth was steady — the strongest among the world’s leading economies. Now, India is increasingly counting the cost of the Iran war, which economists say will keep mounting if the deadlock between the US and Iran remains unresolved and the blockage of oil supplies continues. As the world’s third-largest oil importer and consumer, India ships in about 90 per cent of its oil, making its economy one of the most exposed to the war and the prolonged war-related disruptions, which include the effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz through which a fifth of global oil and gas transit. While India has announced a flurry of measures to contain the impact on the rupee and foreign exchange reserves, the latest of which were from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday, analysts say the broader drag on economic growth, inflation and government finances is set to increase so long as oil prices remain elevated. “India is set for a series of supply shocks,” Michael Langham, emerging markets economist at Aberdeen Investments, said. Apart from pressure on oil prices, the country also faces supply disruptions to fertiliser as a result of the Iran war, which will impact key crops like wheat when farmers are already bracing for an El Niño weather phenomenon that often portends drought. “This will all drag on India’s growth outlook, yet the ability of the RBI to look through the energy price shock from the Strait of Hormuz will be increasingly difficult given the overlapping nature of these supply shocks,” Langham said. At the end of last year, India’s central bank governor, Sanjay Malhotra, talked about a “rare Goldilocks” phase for the economy as it headed into 2026. Inflation levels were falling and growth remained relatively strong. The Iran war upended that outlook. India’s oil-and-gas import bill jumped 53pc in April from March, prompting forecasts for the balance of payments (BoP) deficit — essentially money coming into the economy netted off against money going out — to balloon. HSBC says that Friday’s series of steps may do a lot to limit the currency damage. Until Friday, it had expected India’s BoP deficit to swell to about $65 billion in 2026-27, but now expects the measures to improve the balance by about $30 billion. In 2025-26, India’s BoP deficit was at $25.2bn or 0.6pc of GDP. India is also curbing gold imports, urging citizens to limit foreign travel and calling for more use of public transport to reduce oil demand. ‘Difficult position’ But the macro picture is more challenging. Benchmark international oil prices surged after the war began on February 28, climbing to nearly $120 per barrel. Prices have eased, but they remain about 30pc higher overall, while gas prices have risen 75pc over the same period. As a result, the central bank sees inflation averaging 5.1pc in the financial year to the end of March 2027, up from a 3.48pc reading in April, and economic growth slipping to 6.6pc from 7.7pc in the previous year. While the RBI kept rates on hold last week, interest rate swap markets are pricing in at least 25 basis points of rate hikes over the next three months and more than 75 basis points over the next year. “India continues to face deeper structural challenges which has weighed on foreign direct investment, employment, manufacturing expansion, consumption, and nominal GDP growth,” said Sat Duhra, portfolio manager at Asia ex-Japan equity team at Janus Henderson Investors. Duhra said the energy shock will undermine growth and pressure government finances. “Any move to rein in public-sector capex to stabilise conditions would risk further slowing growth,” he said. “This leaves policymakers in a difficult position.” Strong oil demand India delayed raising retail fuel prices as import costs mounted. Petrol and diesel are up less than 10pc since then, compared with 50pc or more in some other oil-importing countries in Asia. Petrol and diesel prices are deregulated, but the government exerts significant influence as the majority shareholder of the key retail companies. Elsewhere, high prices have reduced demand and helped balance undersupplied markets. The government has said it will not compensate fuel retailers for losses, a strategy analysts say will come at a cost for the government, such as through reduced dividends, and so cut its financial firepower to handle the crisis. The government’s fertiliser subsidy is likely to jump 20pc in 2026-27, a government official said. Fertiliser is vital for India’s agrarian economy, which supports nearly half the population, but may be more so this year given the risk of drought owing to El Niño. The government also cut gasoline and gasoil taxes, forgoing 140 billion INR in monthly revenues. The government is targeting a fiscal deficit of 4.3pc of GDP this financial year, but a Reuters poll forecast it would swell to 4.7pc and some economists see it going as high as 5pc. India-based credit rating agency Crisil expects further small price increases in retail oil prices, which will have a wider impact. “The broader effect will reverberate across the economy through higher-transport costs, pushing up both food and core inflation,” it said in a report.

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