Orlando Sentinel

India sees once-solid economy shrink 24%

- By Sheikh Saaliq

NEW DELHI — India’s economy contracted by 23.9% in the April-June quarter, its worst performanc­e in at least 24 years, the government announced Monday, as the coronaviru­s pandemic ravaged what was once the world’s fastest growing major economy.

The contractio­n followed 3.1% growth in the previous quarter, which was the worst performanc­e in at least eight years, the National Statistica­l Office said.

India has been publishing quarterly gross domestic product figures since 1996.

The pandemic has caused economies around the world to contract, but India’s growth had slowed even before the pandemic struck. Many economists believe Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s demonetiza­tion of currency in 2016 and a hasty rollout of a goods and services tax inflicted blows to manufactur­ing.

Modi’s government in May announced a $266 billion stimulus package, but consumer demand and manufactur­ing are yet to recover.

Many economists say the distress caused by the contractio­n could be much worse within the informal sector, the backbone of India’s economy, which was hit far harder than the organized sector during a nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown during much of the April-June quarter.

There are hopes for a tentative recovery in the next quarter as tens of thousands of migrant workers who returned to their villages after losing jobs during the lockdown slowly return to cities as more workplaces open up. But the picture remains grim for many of the jobless.

About 19 million salaried people have lost their jobs since the 68-day lockdown began in late March, according to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, an independen­t think tank.

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