Business World

India economic growth slows in third quarter

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NEW DELHI — India’s economic growth fell to a worse-than-expected 7.1% in the July-September quarter, dragged down by a slower consumer spending and farm growth, in a setback for Prime Minister Narendra Modi who faces a national election by May.

India’s growth is still faster than China’s 6.5% in the same quarter, but the figures were a come-down from the more than two-year high of 8.2% set in the June quarter.

A Reuters poll of economists had forecasted growth of 7.4% for the quarter.

Having swept to power in 2014 promising to galvanize the economy, Mr. Modi has been criticized for failing to create enough jobs for the more than 12 million young Indians entering the labor force each year.

India needs growth of eightperce­nt-plus to generate enough jobs for those workers.

The unemployme­nt rate rose to a two-year high of 6.9% in October, with nearly 30 million young people looking for jobs, according to a report released this month by Center for Monitoring India Economy, a Mumbai based think tank.

Some economists expect the slowdown to stretch on to the election, or beyond — encouragin­g the government to raise spending and breach its fiscal deficit target.

“With elections coming up, you will see a ramp-up in spending,” said Teresa John, an economist at Nirmal Bang Institutio­nal Equities, a Mumbai based brokerage, who added growth could even be slower in the second half of the fiscal year.

The Statistics ministry released data showing a decline in growth of the farm sector and consumer spending, raising fears that slower rural wage growth could hit growth in the second half of the fiscal year ending in March 2019.

The gross domestic product (GDP) figure was “disappoint­ing,” Subhash Chandra Garg, economic affairs secretary, said in a tweet, adding first half GDP growth of 7.6% nonetheles­s remained robust and healthy — still highest in the world.

On Wednesday, a government panel announced revised growth estimates that made the Modi administra­tion’s record look better than the previous Congress-led government­s. Having estimated in August that the Congress oversaw an average annual growth rate of 8.1% during its decade in power, the Statistics ministry revised that number down to 6.82% for 2005/06 to 2011/12 period, putting it well below the 7.35% average for the first four years of Mr. Modi’s term.

A fall in food prices has hit rural incomes in recent months, which in turn dampened sales of consumer durables and other products. Tens of thousands of farmers and rural workers marched to the Indian parliament in the capital, New Delhi, on Friday in a protest against soaring operating costs and plunging produce prices that have brought misery to many.

Farm output grew 3.8% yearon-year in the September quarter compared with 5.3% the previous quarter.

The constructi­on sector, one of the biggest employers after agricultur­e, grew 7.8% year-onyear, slower than 8.7% in the previous quarter.

Several factors conspired to hold the economy back in the middle of this year, including a weak rupee and a squeeze in India’s shadow banking sector that hindered both investment and consumptio­n.

The broader NSE share index is up 3.3% so far this year. In 2017 NSE had gained 28.6%.

More positively, the drop in inflation and oil prices and the rupee’s recovery against dollar have removed pressure for an increase in interest rates, and a Reuters poll of economists predicted that rates will be left unchanged when the central bank’s monetary policy committee meets on Dec. 5.

Anubhuti Sahay, head of economic research, South Asia, Standard Chartered Bank said the central bank was likely to retain its calibrated stance in December amidst uncertaint­ies around crude oil prices and global growth. “Reviving private investment and creating jobs are prerequisi­tes for a sustainabl­e pickup in growth,” he said.

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