MUMBAI: India’s economic growth will bounce back to 8% in the next fiscal year as one-time hits due to demonetisation and goods and services tax wears off and benefits due to formalisation of the economy, strong global growth and recapitalisation of public sector banks kick in, US-based investment bank Goldman Sachs said in its year-end forecast.India’s growth will accelerate to 8% in the fiscal year through March 2019 from 6.4% in fiscal 2018, the bank said, making the economy the fastest growing major in the world, like it was in fiscal 2017 with a 7.1% expansion.“Activity growth will likely pick up in the first half of 2018 as the drag from the idiosyncratic shocks of demonetisation and GST implementation fade … most of the retailers, wholesalers and manufacturers we spoke to mentioned that the recent announcements to ease compliance burden and reduce tax rates for nearly 200 products could boost activity in the next three-six months,” Goldman Sachs said.Goldman Sachs expects the Rs 2.11 lakh crore bank recapitalisation, announced last month, to boost credit supply and lower borrowing costs as healthier public sector banks push lending. Wage hike for government workers and higher infrastructure spending from the government will also boost growth.“Any delays on the GST-related effects fading and smooth implementation of the bank recapitalisation programme would pose downside risks to our growth outlook. Other risks to our growth outlook include rising oil prices, softer global growth or delayed NPA resolution that could increase provisioning costs,” Goldman Sachs said in a report, authored by Andrew Tilton, its chief Asia economist.Accelerating inflation, mainly due to higher food prices, could lead to a shift in the Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy stance by the middle of the next fiscal year, the investment bank said. Goldman Sachs expects consumer price inflation in India to rise to 5.3% in fiscal 2019 from 3.4% this year, as food prices rise from a low base.“Weaker summer crop production and lower water reservoir levels may also put upward pressure on food inflation … higher commodity prices, particularly for oil and coal, are also expected to be inflationary,” it said.Higher inflation will lead the RBI to increase its benchmark repo rate by three-fourths of a percentage point between October 2018 and June 2019 — from 6% now to 6.75%, it said. “As growth picks up and economy-wide slack declines, the pressure on the RBI to raise rates would be even greater,” Goldman Sachs said. It expects the rupee to rise to Rs 62 a dollar from around Rs 65 currently.The bank expects the local stock market to yield 14% returns in the local currency, which means that the 50-share Nifty index will rise to 11,600 by December 2018 from the 10,215 points level on November 16. On Monday, the index ended at 10,399.55.