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India with an expected growth rate of 7.5 percent this year is set to surpass China and for the first time is leading the World Bank's growth chart of major economies. "With an expected growth of 7.5 percent this year, India is, for the first time, leading the World Bank's growth chart of major economies," said Kaushik Basu, World Bank Chief Economist and Senior Vice President after the release of the latest Global Economic Prospects (GEP) report. China is projected to grow at 7.1 percent this year. Developing countries are now projected to grow by 4.4 percent this year, with a likely rise to 5.2 percent in 2016, and 5.4 percent in 2017, the report said. In China, the carefully managed slowdown continues, with growth likely to moderate to a still robust 7.1 percent this year. In India, which is an oil importer, reforms have buoyed confidence and falling oil prices have reduced vulnerabilities, paving the way for the economy to grow by a robust 7.5 percent rate in 2015, the report said. Basu said "slowly but surely" the ground beneath the global economy is shifting. "China has avoided the potholes skillfully for now and is easing to a growth rate of 7.1 percent; Brazil, with its corruption scandal making news, has been less lucky, dipping into negative growth," he said. The main shadow over this moving landscape is of the eventual US liftoff, he noted.