The Asian Age

Positive signals on growth are evident

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The economy appears to be fine and kicking. All trends point to it having recovered after the government took remedial measures to assuage blows from the reckless demonetisa­tion and half- baked implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax. Growth was also spurred by the measures announced in the February Budget to boost rural incomes and growth. The recovery is evident in the January- March quarter revenues of a select group of Indian corporates that reported sales growth of 10.3 per cent. The fourth- quarter 2017- 18 GDP growth was 7.7 per cent, the highest in seven quarters.

One hopes that the Reserve Bank, which will announce its monetary policy on Wednesday, will not do anything to trip this growth momentum, that was also helped by global growth. The RBI governor had earlier said he wanted to see the course of the monsoon and inflation before deciding on rates, so it’s expected the monetary policy committee will hold rates for now. Global investment is also picking up in developed economies, which will help India’s export sector. So raising interest rates now is the last thing India Inc or the economy needs. Last week’s rise in petrol and diesel prices has hurt public sentiments, and the government’s proposal to cut excise duty is yet to materialis­e. The government has little leeway in cutting prices as it would dent its revenues. One hopes the RBI isn’t tempted to raise rates as inflation rose for the first time in four months in April — at 4.6 per cent, compared to 4.3 per cent in March.

The fourth- quarter growth was fuelled by the 11.5 per cent uptick in constructi­on activity, followed by manufactur­ing 9.1 per cent.

While one view is that this growth is nothing to crow about as it was fuelled by government spending, the counter- view, that private investment is behind the boost, is perhaps more accurate. A significan­t investment, in industry chamber Ficci’s view, came from lowcost housing finance companies.

The Controller- General of Accounts has also revealed that the government’s capital expenditur­e has contracted by 58.4 per cent, compared to the same period last year. While it’s a fact private investment was not forthcomin­g earlier due to overcapaci­ty and corporate books being highly leveraged, private investment has since picked up. It’s estimated that the private sector has invested around ` 50,000 crores in the past few months in manufactur­ing and services. This will also give a fillip to employment as manufactur­ing is an employment generator.

The government should do all that it can to encourage private investment and affordable low- cost housing. The latter investment had seen growth up from ` 1,000 crores in March 2013 to over ` 27,000 crores in December 2017, according to Ficci. Housing is a job multiplier and so are exports, which are yet to pick up steam.

One hopes that the Reserve Bank, which will announce its monetary policy on Wednesday, will not do anything to trip this growth momentum, that was also helped by global growth

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