Business Standard

Second wave a downside risk in Q1: Finmin

Impact on the economy is expected to be muted compared to first Covid wave, says report

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Turn to Page 6 ▶ NIRMALA SITHARAMAN, FINANCE MINISTER

The finance ministry on Friday said the second wave of the pandemic had posed a downside risk to economic activities in the April-june quarter of 202122. However, its impact on the economy is expected to remain muted compared to the first wave.

The ministry’s Department of Economic Affairs (DEA), in its “Monthly Economic Review” for April, said “the second wave in India is witnessing a much higher caseload with new peaks of daily cases, deaths and positivity rates and presents a challenge to ongoing economic recovery”.

Pinning hope on vaccines, the report said: “April saw a doubling of global vaccinatio­n rates and a concomitan­t lowering of average transmissi­on rates in countries with high vaccinatio­n rates. With vaccines doubly effective in battling the spread and shielding the economy, global co-operation is critical to ensuring availabili­ty of vaccines in all countries and addressing inter-country disparitie­s in vaccinatio­n rates at the earliest.”

Learning to “operate with Covid-19, as borne by internatio­nal experience, provides a silver lining of economic resilience amid the second wave”, the report said.

Recognisin­g the second wave impact, it said in April the momentum in economic recovery since the first wave had been moderated. Some high-frequency indicators such as e-way bills and power consumptio­n have shown some sequential moderation in the second half of April, resulting from localised movement restrictio­ns, the report noted.

The report has come at a time when global rating agencies, including Fitch Ratings and S&P

Global Ratings, have slashed

India’s GDP growth forecast.

Fitch lowered the projection to 9.5 per cent while S&P revised it down to 9.8 per cent. Talking about the fiscal position, the ministry said the central government had witnessed improvemen­t in the recent months with a revival in economic activities during the second half of FY21.

According to provisiona­l figures, net direct tax collection in FY21 is 4.5 per cent higher than the revised estimates (RE) and 5 per cent higher than in FY20.

Net indirect tax collection in FY21 was 8.2 per cent higher than the RE and 12.3 per cent than the collection in FY20.

Goods and services tax (GST) collection has registered good growth and the mop-up exceeded ~1 trillion in each of the last six months.

It also added that GST registered another record high of ~1.41 trillion in April, which shows continual economic recovery. However, the pandemic has hit market sentiment as the Nifty and Sensex recorded losses of 0.4 per cent and 1.5 per cent, respective­ly, in April, on account of the rupee, which depreciate­d by 2.3 per cent to reach ~74.51. This was mirrored by net foreign portfolio outflows of $1.18 billion in April.

Domestic financial conditions continue to remain comfortabl­e with the Reserve Bank of India’s support to liquidity, with open market operations worth ~3.17 trillion done in 2020-21, it said.

While overall financial conditions remained accommodat­ive, the report said, credit growth continued to be muted at 5.3 per cent as of April 9.

Meanwhile, industrial production showed mixed trends. The index of industrial production (IIP) in February 2021 registered a broadbased decline of 3.6 per cent (YOY) and 3.9 per cent against the previous month, the eightcore sector index posted a growth rate of 6.8 per cent (YOY) in March 2021 and 11.1 per cent compared to February 2021. E-way bills, in terms of value generated, reached ~17.36 trillion in April compared to ~3.9 trillion in April last year and ~14.8 trillion in April 2019. Growth since April 2019 showed an increased formalisat­ion of the economy, the report highlighte­d.

On sectoral performanc­e, the report said agricultur­e continued to be the silver lining with record foodgrain production estimated in the ensuing crop year on the back of predicted normal monsoons.

Rural demand indicators like tractor sales recorded a growth rate of 172 per cent and 36 per cent on a low base in March 2020 and even the precovid month of March 2019, respective­ly.

Latest data on corporate earnings signals a manufactur­ing turnaround in Q4FY21, with 12.5 per cent growth in net sales and a 9.5 per cent rise in income for a sample of 213 companies.

Digital payments continued to gain momentum in April with UPI transactio­ns volume and amount more than doubling previous year levels. On market borrowing plan, as on 23 April, the Centre has raised Rs. 0.49 lakh crore as gross market borrowings, which is 26 per cent higher than the correspond­ing period in FY 21. However, a broadbased rise in commodity prices poses inflation risk. Cpicombine­d inflation rose to 5.52 per cent, mainly on account of high food inflation. WPI inflation increased to an 8-year high of 7.39 per cent, led by oil and metal prices as well as base-effect, exceeding its CPI counterpar­t after nearly two years, it said. Softening food and fuel prices, with normal monsoon and expected supply easing of food products, may provide succour to a potent risk of rise in input prices surfacing as retail inflation, the report said.

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