Hindustan Times (Delhi)

GDP growth

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such as “low inflation, macroecono­mic stability, low fiscal deficit and good foreign reserves”.

Rumki Majumdar, economist, Deloitte India, an audit firm, agreed: “Compared to the past four slowdown cycles, several economic fundamenta­ls are in much better shape today. Inflation is low and is expected to remain so because of the excess capacity in the economy.”

Earlier this week, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman indicated as much in Parliament. On Thursday, she put out a series of tweets highlighti­ng her government’s record at keeping inflation under control, growing manufactur­ing faster, and maintainin­g the fiscal health of the economy. “Marcroecon­omic fundamenta­ls of India are strong under the Narendra Modi led NDA government,” she tweeted.

Sitharaman said in Parliament earlier this week that the government had taken 32 measures to address issues faced by the various sectors. These include a cut in corporate taxes, a real estate fund aimed at reviving incomplete projects, the merger of banks, and a largescale disinvestm­ent exercise.

The low GDP growth numbers provoked an immediate attack by the opposition. “The economy has been pushed into a coma by the BJP, the Prime Minister, and the Finance Minister,” Congress spokespers­on Randeep Singh Surjewala told reporters.

“Lowest GDP growth in 26 quarters! No answers from FM .... ”, All India Trinamool Congress MP Derek O’brien said.

The GDP growth is 50 basis points lower than what it was in the April-june quarter. One basis point is one hundredth of a percentage point. Both figures are the lowest since March 2013, when GDP growth plummeted to 4.3%. Gross Value Added (GVA), which actually measures the value of goods and services produced in the economy, was 4.3% in the quarter ended September,

PFCE

GFCE

GFCF the lowest in the current GDP series.

In terms of sector-wise performanc­e, industry recorded its worst ever quarterly growth rate of 0.5% since June 2012, the earliest period for which GVA growth data is available under the new series. Manufactur­ing contracted by 1%. The only other time manufactur­ing contracted under the new series was in June 2017, which many believe was a result of companies disposing of inventorie­s to pre-empt the implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in July 2017. Service sector growth fell to 6.8%, the lowest since 5.3% in March 2014.

Private Final Consumptio­n Expenditur­e, which accounts for more than 50% of GDP, made a recovery in the quarter, growing at 5.1% from 3.1% in the first quarter, although some experts said that on-ground evidence of rising exception is patchy. Gross Fixed Capital Formation, a measure of investment by firms, only grew at 1%, the lowest since December 2014, when it grew at 0.8%.

The other major takeaway from the latest GDP numbers is a collapse in the nominal growth rate. Nominal GDP growth was only 6.1% in the quarter, the lowest since March 2009, when it crashed to just 5.6%. Nominal GDP growth was 8% in the first quarter. Nominal growth rates form the basis of tax estimates in the budget, as taxes are a proportion of nominal rather than real GDP. This year’s budget assumed 12% growth in nominal GDP for the current fiscal year.

The nominal GDP numbers might continue to be grim even in the third quarter, as the GDP deflator – difference between growth at current and constant prices – seems to be following the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) rather than the Consumer Price Index (CPI). CPI and WPI growth in the quarter was 3.5% and 0.9% respective­ly. The GDP deflator in the September quarter was 1.5 percentage points. These two inflation metrics have diverged even further, with the WPI going down and the CPI increasing. A massive shortfall in nominal

GDP growth, a reduction in corporate tax rates -- according to the government’s estimates this will lead to a revenue loss of ~1.45 lakh crore -- is bound to create a major disruption in this year’s fiscal math.

GST collection­s have been less than ~1 lakh crore for more three consecutiv­e months ending October. Reuters reported on Friday that India’s April to October fiscal deficit had already crossed the entire year’s budget target. Earlier this week, the government extended the tenure of the 15th Finance Commission – a constituti­onal body which prepares the roadmap for sharing of resources between Centre and the states every five years – by another year. Growing uncertainl­y around revenue collection­s will only complicate the Finance Commission’s tax math.

Economists said the numbers are worrying. “Manufactur­ing growth has turned negative, core sector industry index is contractin­g by 6% -- these are signs of a serious crisis of production in the economy”, said Himanshu, an associate professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Spiralling food inflation and growing concern about the economy will only make things worse, and complicate a recovery, unless the government does something, he added.

Another expert said the poor GDP number for the second quarter was expected and strong policy measures are required to boost the sagging economy. Ranjen Banerjee, leader of the public finance and economics practice at PWC India, an audit and consulting firm, said it was clear that monetary interventi­ons are not working -- RBI has cut rates by 1.35 percentage points this year -- and called for a fiscal stimulus in “areas with higher multiplier­s and where spends could be immediate” and a “monetary policy push to address the effective transmissi­on of rate cuts to the NBFCS [non-banking finance companies]”. He also emphasised the importance of revival in rural demand to “avert a 5% annual growth rate”.

Majumdar, however, expressed the belief that things will be better in the coming quarters. He pointed to the slew of measures taken by the government and said their impact will be felt with a lag.

Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, however, sought to link the slowdown to what he termed the “state of society”.

Speaking at a seminar in Delhi, he said the GDP growth rate of 4.5% was unacceptab­le and worrisome. “Aspiration of our country is to grow at 8-9%. The sharp decline of GDP from 5% in Q1 to 4.5% in Q2 is worrisome. Mere changes in economic policies will not help revive the economy,” he said.

“We need to change the current climate in our society from one of fear to one of confidence for our economy to start growing at 8% per annum. The state of the economy is a reflection of the state of its society. Our social fabric of trust and confidence is now torn and ruptured,” he added.

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