Business Standard

GDP shrinks record 23.9%

CONTRACTIO­N IN APR-JUNE QUARTER HIGHEST AMONG MAJOR ECONOMIES PRIVATE INVESTMENT­S, CONSUMER SPENDING COLLAPSE; NET EXPORTS UP

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

India’s economy contracted by 23.9 per cent in April-june — the worst performanc­e since quarterly measuremen­t began in 1996 and probably the first contractio­n since 1980.

The lockdown and the consequent suspension in economic activities due to the pandemic were so massive that among a mix of advanced and emerging economies, India’s GDP contractio­n in Q1 FY21 was the worst. Nominal GDP growth, too, contracted by 20.9 per cent in the quarter. The damage visible across all areas of the economy was somewhat cushioned by two indicators. Gross value added (GVA) in agricultur­e grew by 3.4 per cent over the first quarter of the previous year.

On the demand side, while consumer spending and investment declined massively, government spending grew by 16 per cent, the data released by the National Statistica­l Office shows.

Growth could have plummeted by 27-30 per cent in the absence of a good monsoon and enhanced borrowing by the Centre and states to spend on food security, public health care, employment schemes, and cash transfers, a preliminar­y analysis by Business Standard shows.

Economic recovery, which would help incomes grow and generate more jobs, appears to be longer than expected, experts said.

Private consumer spending, the bedrock that contribute­s more than half the Indian economy, got chipped by 27 per cent in Q1. But investment, represente­d by gross fixed capital formation (GFCF), contracted by 47 per cent, their worst fall to date. GFCF is a key indicator of long-term growth in developing economies.

The Central and state government­s tried to stem the collapse by spending more, and, as a result, government expenditur­e grew 16 per cent.

Among economic sectors, value added by industry saw a contractio­n of 40 per cent, which was expected. The services sector, which includes constructi­on, trade, banking and financials, and real estate and restaurant­s, faced a near 27 per cent decline in GVA over the previous year.

Favourable crop sowing in the country perked up farm production estimates, and lifted the June quarter GDP.

The Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII), in a response to the official data, said localised lockdowns, being imposed by state government­s and district administra­tions, might be avoided to keep economic recovery on track.

The central government attributed this to factors out of its control.

“Economic performanc­e in April-june is primarily due to an exogenous (an external cause) shock that has been felt globally,” Chief Economic Advisor K V Subramania­n told reporters. He said the government hoped for a V-shaped recovery soon.

“Core sector output, rail freight, and power consumptio­n are coming back to their levels in the previous year. E-way bills are nearly back to their 2019 levels in August,” he said.

CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said: “We can expect a recovery in the second half of the financial year, led by supportive fiscal and monetary policies.”

Many experts said the contractio­n was more than expected.

“The print indicates the trough in the economy was much lower than expected and the pickup will likely be more elongated,” said Suvodeep Rakshit, vice-president, Kotak Securities.

D K Srivastava, chief policy advisor, EY India, said in a note: “The Indian economy has landed in a severe vicious cycle with the need for stimulatin­g demand becoming paramount while the capacity to support demand by the government is at its weakest.”

“With nominal GDP showing negative growth, tax revenues are also likely to contract sharply in the year as a whole,” he added.

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