Khaleej Times

What’s the real score on India’s GDP?

- Rajesh Kumar Singh Forecastin­g India’s GDP is ‘like predicting the English weather’. —

new delhi — Surprised again by India’s strong official growth statistics, economists are relying increasing­ly on high-frequency indicators like bank credit and rail freight to gauge the real health of Asia’s third-largest economy.

For India’s cash-reliant economy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision in November to outlaw old Rs500 and Rs1,000 banknotes came as a big shock.

The decision sucked 86 per cent of cash out of circulatio­n, and everyone from street hawkers to big consumer goods firms suffered a slump in sales.

With data on commercial vehicle output, rail freight, service tax receipts and home appliance sales showing slowing growth or contractio­n, economic expansion in the quarter to December was forecast by economists at 6.4 per cent.

In fact, it came in at seven per cent, slower than the previous quarter but enough for India to retain the title of the world’s fastest growing major economy.

“Forecastin­g India’s GDP has become like predicting the English weather,” said one senior economist with an internatio­nal ratings agency. “You never know when it will rain, when it will shine.”

The shock was bigger for economists at Mumbai-based brokerage Ambit Capital, who predicted the economy may even contract in the quarter after the cash crunch hobbled businesses.

Ambit’s Ritika Mankar Mukherjee defended her team’s view, which she said was based on an extensive survey of small- and medium-sized enterprise­s. She also cited a slowdown in bank credit growth to a multi-year low of five per cent.

“India is a heavily bank credit-dependent economy,” she said.

“How come you have an accelerati­on in manufactur­ing activity when credit growth is slowing down?”

Ambit is one of several brokerages to devise their own measures of economic activity, applying methods honed in China, where GDP figures are suspected to have been “smoothed” for years by the authoritie­s.

“The message from the GDP numbers doesn’t tally with what we see on the ground,” said Sonal Varma, an economist with Nomura in Singapore. “It does become important to supplement your analysis with additional informatio­n.”

Politics of data

The official figures were music to the ears of Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, as it fights a tough election in the battlegrou­nd state of Uttar Pradesh.

Modi had taken flak for his shock monetary therapy from opposition parties as well as Nobel laureates Amartya Sen and Paul Krugman. Buoyed by the growth figures, he hit back at Sen, who teaches economics at Harvard University. “Hard work is more important than Harvard,” he told a campaign rally in Uttar Pradesh on Wednesday.

The regional election in a state that is home to one in six Indians is a key mid-term test of Modi’s popularity. A strong showing would boost his chances of winning a second term in 2019.

Sandeep Shastri, a political scientist, says the GDP figures will have little bearing on the election.

“It is not a substantiv­e issue for voters,” he said.

Official GDP data has been questioned since a change in methodolog­y in 2015 transforme­d India into the world’s fastest-growing major economy. New Delhi defended the overhaul, citing an improved database of hundreds of thousands of firms. Data reporting has long been a challenge in an economy where the informal sector accounts for 40 per cent of output and employs nine in 10 workers. —

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