Business Standard

Farm sector clocks 4.1% growth in Q4 of FY22

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 31 May

India’s farm sector grew at a healthy 4.1 per cent rate in the fourth quarter of FY22 (at constant prices), up from 2.8 per cent during the correspond­ing period of the previous year.

For the full year, growth was a tad lower at 3 per cent than the 3.3 per cent in FY21.

Data from the ministry of statistics and programme implementa­tion (MOSPI) shows that at current prices, agricultur­e and allied activities grew at 15.2 per cent in the fourth quarter. This was 6.2 per cent during the correspond­ing period of FY21.

This delivered an inflation impact of 11.1 per cent as compared to 3.4 per cent in FY21. The growth in Q4 of FY22, according to experts, was largely due to the performanc­e of the non-crop sector such as horticultu­re, floricultu­re and animal husbandry. It was also because of good exports in the January-march 2022 period.

Any growth between 3.5 and 4 per cent for the farm sector is considered above the long-term trend line.

However, for the full year, gross value added (GVA) for agricultur­e and allied sector is expected to be marginally less than FY21 at 3 per cent due to a drop in wheat production.

“The NSO (National Statistica­l Office) has incorporat­ed the third advance estimate for crop production, which points towards a drop in wheat output while releasing the GDP numbers,” Vivek Kumar, co-head, Quanteco Research, told Business Standard.

He said that in the case of the primary sector, it is always better to refer to full-year numbers. This is because it gives a clearer picture of the underlying trend while smoothenin­g the seasonal variations.

Wheat and cotton production, according to the third advance estimate of agricultur­e output released on May 19, 2022, is estimated to have gone down by 4.4 per cent and 7.4

THE ACTUAL IMPACT OF THE UNFORESEEN WEATHER EVENTS ON CROP OUTPUT AND THEIR CORRESPOND­ING EFFECT ON AGRICULTUR­E GDP WILL GET MORE PRONOUNCED IN THE COMING QUARTERS

per cent, respective­ly. This was in comparison to the second estimate that was released in February 2022. It happened due to the impact of the heat wave in March and preceded by a pest attack on the cotton crop (see chart).

The actual impact of these unforeseen weather events on crop output and their correspond­ing effect on agricultur­e GDP will get more pronounced in the coming quarters, that is, the first quarter of FY23.

Moreover, most people expect that if the monsoon remains healthy, the farm sector may see a healthy growth in FY23. It will be driven by good harvest and steady prices.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) on Tuesday updated the forecast for 2022 southwest monsoon to 103 per cent of the Long Period Average (LPA) from 99 per cent predicted in April. This is because La Nina conditions are expected to prevail during the entire stretch of the fourmonth rainy season.

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