Kuwait Times

India politician­s spar over dodgy economic data

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It may be the world’s sixth largest, but most other things about India’s economy are up for debate. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is under fire for the release of new historical GDP figures that significan­tly downgraded growth during the years the opposition Congress party was in power, replacing old government estimates and those prepared by an independen­t committee. The figures, released by the government’s Central Statistics Office (CSO), showed growth in the 10 years of Congress rule to 2014 averaged 6.7 percent, below an average of 7.4 percent under the current government. A previous government estimate had growth under Congress at 7.8 percent.

P Chidambara­m, a former Congress finance minister, called the release “a joke”. In response India’s current finance minister, the BJP’s Arun Jaitley, said the CSO was a credible organizati­on. The fallout comes at a critical time for Prime Minister Narendra Modi. India’s economy grew a weakerthan-expected 7.1 percent in the JulySeptem­ber quarter, from a more than two-year high of 8.2 percent in the previous quarter, government data showed on Friday.

Modi faces a general election next year, when the performanc­e of the economy under his pro-business administra­tion compared with the Congress era is likely to dominate campaignin­g. The spat has also alarmed India’s top statistici­ans, who have long faced the difficult task of estimating growth and unemployme­nt in an economy with hundreds of millions of informal workers, and dominated its financial press and political cartoons in recent days. “The entire episode threatens to bring disrepute to India’s statistica­l services,” said an editorial in Mint, one of the country’s leading business newspapers, on Friday. A joke widely circulated on WhatsApp said the government would soon be reinterpre­ting the last cricket World Cup, in which India crashed out in the semifinals, to say the country won based on a new methodolog­y.

Competing interests Unlike many major economies, India lacks an independen­t statistica­l body. An organizati­on called the National Statistics Commission (NSC) was formed in 2005 with that intention, though it is yet to be recognized as the official body for generating statistics. Last year the NSC set up a committee, chaired by economist Sudipto Mundle, to come up with a new set of historical GDP figures. Its report, published in July, showed growth averaged 8.1 percent in the decade before the BJP took power.

After the figures were cheered by the Congress, the government issued a clarificat­ion saying the report “had not yet been finalized and various alternativ­e methods are being explored”. Shortly after, the report was pulled from the government’s website. “The whole thing has unfortunat­ely become very political,” said Mundle, on the battle between the two parties. “It is very troubling.”

Attempts to formalize the NSC’s role have been successive­ly stonewalle­d by both Congress and the BJP, said N R Bhanumurth­y, who sat on the committee chaired by Mundle. “They have not shown much interest in making it independen­t from our government,” he said. The debate over India’s true level of growth is the latest to frustrate economists looking to measure the performanc­e of the country of 1.3 billion people. India has not published its official employment survey since 2015, while a smaller quarterly survey on companies employing more than 10 workers has not been released since March while the government comes up with new methodolog­y. India’s large informal sector made calculatin­g employment “almost impossible”, Bhanumurth­y said, leading to a vacuum that was filled with competing political interests. — Reuters

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