The Asian Age

7.5% growth target is difficult: Eco Survey-2

RBI is urged to cut rates further

- PAWAN BALI

The Economic Survey’s second part, that was tabled by the government in Parliament on Friday, indicated that the country’s economic growth was unlikely to accelerate in the current fiscal and it will be difficult for GDP to touch the higher rate of 7.5 per cent in 2017-18 as projected earlier. This shows the huge challenge before the Narendra Modi government to revive the economy, and particular­ly before the 2019 general election.

The Survey — the first part of which was laid before Parliament on January 31, a day before the Budget, urged the government to use all policy tools to revive momentum and called for more interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank. The Survey’s second

The growth of India’s services sector, which was highly resilient even during the global financial crisis, has come down to 7.7% in 2016-17

Survey criticises RBI for wrong inflation prediction, and consequent­ly keeping interest rates high

It says repo rate by RBI was still 25-75 basis points above the neutral rate

part, which includes the mid-year review, was tabled by finance minister Arun Jaitley.

The first part of the Economic Survey had projected GDP to grow by 6.75 and 7.5 per cent in the current fiscal. However, now the government says things have changed since then, including appreciati­on of the Indian rupee, the RBI not cutting interest rates as aggressive­ly as expected, farm loan waiver, increasing stress to balance sheets of companies in power and telecommun­ications, agricultur­al stress and certain transition­al friction from the implementa­tion of GST.

“In February, the Survey (Volume I) had forecast a range for real GDP growth of 6.75 per cent to 7.5 per cent for FY 2018. The balance of probabilit­ies has changed accordingl­y, with outcomes closer to the upper end having much less weight than previously,” the Survey said on

Continued from Page 1 Friday. India’s economy had hit a bump in 2016-17, seeing the slowest growth in three years at 7.1 per cent. Chief economic adviser Arvind Subramania­n, author of the Survey, said the Indian economy has seen an across-the-board decelerati­on in activity and requires policymake­rs to come up with all possible tools to revive growth. “There are very favourable medium-term developmen­ts. The real challenge now is short-term growth and how we need to respond to that. We need to bring all the policy tools we have to revive shortterm growth,” said Mr Subramania­n. The Survey said the macro-economic challenge will be to counter deflationa­ry impulses through key monetary, fiscal and agricultur­al policies. It said that the RBI’s policy repo rate was still 25-75 basis points above the neutral rate. The Survey said farm loan waivers could cut demand in the economy by up to 0.7 per cent of GDP. It said that since February 2017, the rupee had appreciate­d by about 1.5 per cent in real terms, impacting exports.

On the positive side, the Survey said there was a sense of optimism on structural reforms with the launch of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), the decision in principle to privatise Air India, further rationalis­ation of energy subsidies and the action taken to address the Twin Balance Sheet (TBS) challenge. The Economic Survey said retail inflation at the end of March 2018 would remain well within the RBI’s medium-term target of four per cent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India