Business Standard

Subramania­n vs Subramania­n: Survey debunks critics

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

The Economic Survey has found no evidence of miscalcula­tion of India’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth by the new methodolog­y, as alleged by critics. “...this chapter finds no evidence of mis-estimation of India’s GDP growth,” said the Survey in the chapter titled “Is India’s GDP Growth Overstated? No!”

The issue assumes importance since many critics, including Arvind Subramania­n, the predecesso­r of Chief Economic Adviser Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n, author of this Survey, found loopholes in the current methodolog­y that uses value addition method and new base year of 2011-12.

Arvind had said in his research paper that a variety of evidence — within India and across countries — suggests that India’s GDP growth had been overstated by about 2.5 percentage points per year in the post-2011 period.

There have been similar criticisms of the methodolog­y by other experts as well.

The Survey, penned by Krishnamur­thy, however, said the models that incorrectl­y overestima­te GDP growth by over 2.77 per cent for India post-2011 also mis-estimate GDP growth over the same period for 51 other countries by anywhere between 4 per cent and minus 4.6 per cent. These mis-estimates include wrong calculatio­n of the UK’S GDP by 1.6 per cent, Germany by 1 per cent, Singapore by minus 2.3 per cent, South Africa by minus 1.2 per cent and Belgium by minus 1.3 per cent.

In the paper published at Harvard University, Arvind noted that the one sector where mis-measuremen­t is particular­ly high was manufactur­ing. He said pre-2011, manufactur­ing value added in national accounts tended to be tightly correlated with the manufactur­ing component of the index of industrial production and manufactur­ing exports. But,

thereafter, a key methodolog­ical change affected the measuremen­t of the formal manufactur­ing sector, he said.

The former CEA also related the new GDP methodolog­y with exports, imports, real credit to industry, petroleum consumptio­n, railway freight traffic, and electricit­y consumptio­n etc. The Survey said these parameters are notoriousl­y non-stationary: not only do they flip signs frequently over various 3-year or 5year time periods from 1980 to 2015, their values change significan­tly over this time period as well.

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