Business Standard

India exits recession as GDP grows 0.4% in Q3

REFLECTION OF STRENGTHEN­ING V-SHAPED RECOVERY: FINMIN IMPUTED GDP SEEN TO BE FALLING 1.1% IN FOURTH QUARTER

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

India’s gross domestic product returned to growth — of 0.4 per cent — in October-december after two quarters of contractio­n, the National Statistica­l Office (NSO) said on Friday. In 2020-21, GDP is set to fall 8 per cent against an earlier estimate of 7.7 per cent, the release said.

This is a “reflection of further strengthen­ing of V-shaped recovery”, which began in Q2 of 2020-21, especially after a large GDP contractio­n in Q1 due to the lockdown, the Ministry of Finance said in a release.

However, the cheer may not last because GDP is likely to fall 1.1 per cent in Q4 if we triangulat­e the data available for the first three quarters with the annual estimate.

A more surprising fact is that even this likely contractio­n in Q4 needs 29 per cent real growth in government spending. Expenditur­e by the government fell in Q2 and Q3 when the private corporate and informal sectors in the economy were in pandemic pain, the data shows. This suggests that economic recovery will be a delayed V-shaped one, with some drag towards the last quarter of FY21, despite the massive spending push of over ~4 trillion announced in the Union Budget this year.

Consumer spending, which is the driving force behind India’s economy because it accounts for 60 per cent of the GDP pie, fell 2.4 per cent in Q3, refusing to recover, despite the quarter being in the festive season.

Investment, on the other hand, has grown sharper than expected. After a massive fall in Q1, real gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) recovered fast in Q2 and grew 2.6 per cent in Q3. “The resurgence of GFCF in Q3 was triggered by central government capex, which increased 129 per cent in October, 249 per cent in November, and 62 per cent in December 2020,” the finance ministry said.

Capex induces much higher consumptio­n spending than normal income transfers, the ministry added.

Services were dealt a heavy blow by the pandemic because they are more contact-intensive, but their gross value added has matched the previous year’s level in Q3. Manufactur­ing grew in Q3, but feebly. In Q4, the imputed calculatio­n shows services catching up with manufactur­ing in terms of real growth.

Gross value added (GVA) in financial services and real estate improved greatly in the third quarter, clocking 6.6 per cent GVA growth in Q3. Similarly, constructi­on raced ahead, with its GVA growing 6.2 per cent in the quarter.

Constructi­on is one of the biggest job providers in India’s economy, and its revival is crucial for bringing the livelihood­s of those worst-affected by the pandemic back to normal.

The investment rate in the economy is likely to improve to 26.7 per cent of GDP in 202021, an improvemen­t from the 24.4 per cent seen in the first advance estimate (FAE).

The rate improved from 20.6 per cent of GDP in Q1, the lockdown quarter, to 27.7 per cent in Q3. It is expected to improve to 29.5 per cent of GDP in Q4. GDP at market prices is GVA plus indirect taxes minus subsidies. Growth in GVA is seen to be picking up to 2.5 per cent in Q4, when GDP is likely to fall. “This may be an unintended consequenc­e of the back-ended release in the government’s subsidies,” Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA, said in a note.

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