Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has scored high on overall performance during his
first three months in office, but many are disappointed with his new
administration's efforts to bring down inflation, an opinion poll showed.
The
poll conducted by Today's Chanakya, the only pollster that accurately predicted
the scale of Modi's election victory in May, showed almost half of the
respondents felt the Hindu nationalist leader could have taken more stringent
steps to curb inflation.
Modi
rose to power with promises of reviving India's flagging economy and reducing
prices of essential commodities, but consumer price inflation touched a
two-month high of nearly 8 percent in July while food price inflation neared
double digits.
More
than two-thirds of those polled said
the government's efforts to tackle price
rise have remained unchanged or weakened over the last three months, the survey
results released in two parts over late Tuesday and Wednesday showed.
Though
the Indian economy grew 5.7 percent in the April-June quarter and recorded its
strongest growth in 2-1/2 years, analysts say there is little hard evidence to
indicate a sustained rebound. [ID:nL3N0R23FI]
Ratings
agency Moody's on Wednesday said any upgrade to India's sovereign rating is
limited by the country's fiscal deficit and inflation outlook.
While
41 percent of the respondents said the economy is back on track, 34 percent
said it is still not out of the woods.
Still,
echoing the sentiment of several other recent opinion polls, a large majority
of respondents - 66 percent - said they were satisfied with the new
government's performance so far.
On
the issue of corruption, that cost Modi's predecessors dearly in the national
elections, 54 percent surveyed expressed confidence the current government can
effectively curb graft that plagues Asia's third-largest economy.
Today's
Chanakya, part of a family-run research firm started two decades ago in New
Delhi, interviewed 6,280 people across 14 Indian cities between Aug. 26 and
Aug. 31 for the poll.
Reuters
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