Business Standard

FY22 GDP GROWTH PEGGED AT 11%

This translates into real GDP growing only 2.4% over the absolute level of 2019-20

- NIKUNJ OHRI & INDIVJAL DHASMANA New Delhi, 29 January

The Economic Survey has projected India’s economy to grow 15.4 per cent at current prices in 2021-22, which is likely to be a crucial number for key rates and ratios in the Budget, slated to be presented on Monday.

At constant prices, GDP is estimated to grow at a record high of 11 per cent during the year on the back of normalisat­ion in economic activities with the rollout of vaccines, coupled with supply-side reforms and a push to infrastruc­ture.

However, it should be noted that growth would be coming on the projected contractio­n of the economy by 7.7 per cent. This means India’s real GDP will grow 2.4 per cent over the absolute level of 2019-20, implying that the economy would take two years to go past the pre-pandemic level.

At 15.4 per cent, GDP will be ~224.8 trillion next year. The Budget in all probabilit­y would assume this number and calculate figures such as tax collection, the fiscal deficit, and the investment rate as percentage of this figure. Growth will be supported by a supplyside push from reforms and the easing of regulation­s, infrastruc­tural investment, a boost to manufactur­ing through the productivi­ty-linked incentive scheme, a recovery of pent-up demand for services, increase in discretion­ary consumptio­n subsequent to the vaccine roll-out and a pick-up in credit, given adequate liquidity and low interest rates, the Survey said. These projection­s are in line with the IMF’S estimate of real GDP growth of 11.5 per cent in 2021-22.

The Survey’s forecast will require a substantia­l push from central and state government spending, said Aditi Nayar, principal economist, ICRA. “Announceme­nts on private sector capacity expansion are anticipate­d to be intermitte­nt and sectorspec­ific in the next couple of quarters,” she said.

The Budget is expected to incorporat­e a growth rate in gross tax revenues of 15-16 per cent, which, in conjunctio­n with a stiff target for disinvestm­ent proceeds, would allow the government to project a considerab­le expansion in spending, especially capital expenditur­e, Nayar said. The Survey has reaffirmed India’s strong recovery, resilience, and the commitment to structural reforms, said L Viswanatha­n, partner at Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas. “Emphasis on simpler and better-quality regulation, regulatory enforcemen­t, and investment in supervisio­n will strengthen the rule of law in India and form a strong foundation for the recovery,” Viswanatha­n said.

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