The Free Press Journal

WB sees India growth at 7.2%, wants more women in industry

- AGENCIES

India will remain the fastest growing economy in the world at 7.2 per cent in 201718 on the back of reforms, domestic consumptio­n and improvemen­t in trade, the World Bank on Monday said. In its May 2017 India Developmen­t Update. it suggested that a higher level of women participat­ion in the economy can help propel the country closer to a double digit growth. There were signs of a slowdown in early part of last fiscal but a favourable monsoon lifted the economy before being temporaril­y hit due to demonetisa­tion in November 2016. Demonetisa­tion caused an immediate cash crunch. As a result, a modest slowdown is expected in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth in 2016-17 to 6.8 per cent, World Bank Country Director Junaid Ahmad said.

"Growth is expected to recover in 2017-18 to 7.2 per cent and is projected to gradually increase to 7.7 per cent in 2019-20," the report said. A higher economic growth by 2019-20 is underpinne­d by recovery in private investment­s, which are crowdedin by the recent increase in public capital expenditur­e and improvemen­t in investment climate, said the report.

Ahmad said: "India remains the fastest growing economy in the world and it will get a boost from its approach to GST which will reduce the cost of doing business for firms, reduce logistics cost of moving goods across states, while ensuring no loss in equity."

Overall the impact of GST on equity and poverty is likely to be positive, Ahmad said. Stressing on more women in the workforce, the Washington headquarte­red multi-lateral funding agency said India's potential GDP growth can go up by a full percentage point if half the gap in female labour force participat­ion rate with Bangladesh or Indonesia, is closed. India should create more jobs, expand scope of regular salaried jobs that are flexible besides providing a safe environmen­t to bridge the gender gap in job participat­ion, Frederico Gil Sander, senior economist and author of the report said during a presentati­on here.

Giving comparativ­e data, Sander said India's female labour force participat­ion rate is uniquely low for all levels of education.

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