Hindustan Times (East UP)

GDP to grow at 8-8.5%in FY23: Survey

The growth forecast has been cut on spike in coronaviru­s cases and rising inflation

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NEW DELHI: India has forecast its economy will grow 8% to 8.5% for the fiscal year starting in April, down from 9.2% projected in the current year, as it fights a spike in Covid-19 cases and rising inflationa­ry pressure.

At that pace, India’s economic growth next fiscal year will still be the fastest among major economies.

All macro indicators indicated Asia’s third-largest economy was well placed to face challenges, helped by improving farm and industrial output growth, the government’s annual economic survey said on Monday.

The report, tabled by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in parliament ahead of the annual budget on Tuesday, warned about risks from global inflation and pandemic-related disrupmore tions.

“India does need to be wary of imported inflation, especially from elevated global energy prices,” said Sanjeev Sanyal, principal economic adviser at the finance ministry and the lead author of the report.

India, which meets nearly 80% of its oil needs from imports, faces the risk that inflation will hit consumer demand as global crude prices hover near a 7-year high at than $90 a barrel.

“The global environmen­t still remains uncertain,” the report said citing planned withdrawal of monetary support by major central banks including the U.S. Federal Reserve. Higher rates elsewhere could lead to capital outflows for India.

The growth projection­s assumed a normal rainfall and an orderly withdrawal of global liquidity by major central banks, the report said.

Private economists said the government and central bank would have to balance their efforts to support economic growth considerin­g rising inflationa­ry pressures and sluggish domestic demand.

“With the rising pressure to tighten the monetary stance, policymake­rs will have difficulty in calibratin­g policy choices to balance between growth and (price) stability objectives,” said Rumki Majumdar, economist at Deloitte India.

The report said the government had fiscal space to provide additional support if necessary, citing a 67% increase in revenue receipts during the April-November period from a year earlier.

India’s economy has been on the mend after the government lifted mobility measures in June to curb the spread of coronaviru­s, after contractin­g 7.3% in the previous fiscal year.

But after a surge in Omicron cases early this month, many private economists and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) have cut growth estimates to 9% from an initial 11% estimate.

The annual report, which presents a report card of India’s economic achievemen­ts and provides new estimates, has often missed targets.

Last year it forecast annual economic growth of 11%, that was later revised down by the statistics ministry to 9.2%, after economic activity was hit hard by the Omicron variant.

Private consumptio­n, accounting for nearly 55% of GDP, remains weak amid rising levels of household debt, while retail prices have soared since the coronaviru­s outbreak began in early 2020.

Meanwhile, the economic survey released on Monday also said that the Indian markets have outperform­ed other emerging market peers in AprilDecem­ber 2021 on account of good corporate earnings, sharp rise in vaccinatio­n and opening up of business establishm­ent across the country.

 ?? ?? India’s macro indicators indicated that the country is well placed to face challenges, helped by improving farm and industrial output growth, the economic survey said.
India’s macro indicators indicated that the country is well placed to face challenges, helped by improving farm and industrial output growth, the economic survey said.

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