Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Indian economy sees a record fall

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Indian economy declined by a record 23.9% in the first quarter of 2020-21 (April-June), reflecting the economic cost of the complete lockdown imposed to fight the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) that was in place in April and May, the first two months of the period. The contractio­n, the worst on record, was sharper than estimated by economists and could mean that the full year gross domestic product (GDP) for 2020-21 contracts by around 10%. That’s because most experts expect the GDP numbers to be revised downwards as more data from smaller companies, hit hard by the pandemic, and, eventually, data on the informal sector are factored in. Gross Value Added, which measures the value of production minus taxes, declined 22.6%. “With nominal GDP also showing a negative growth of about -23% in the quarter, tax revenues are likely to contract sharply in the year,” said DK Srivastava, chief policy adviser, EY India. However, Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n, the chief economic adviser, claimed that “India is experienci­ng a V-shaped recovery after the unlocks have been announced”, citing the declining trend in core sector contractio­n, freight traffic growth (6% higher in the first 26 days of August compared to a year ago), and power consumptio­n and E-Way bills (almost at last year’s levels) to buttress his point. “We should expect better performanc­e in subsequent quarters,” he said. Other data released on Monday showed that the core sector shrank by 9.6% in July, better than the 12.9% decline in June. Still, the number marked the fifth straight month of decline for eight core industry sectors. The sharp fall in growth could encourage the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), currently holding interest rates, to consider a rate cut when it meets in October, although high inflation may hold its hand. “The RBI still has its focus on growth. This slightly improves chances of a rate cut in October. Unless the inflation comes below 5% in the next reading, RBI might still postpone the rate cut to December,” Reuters quoted L&T’s chief economist Rupa Rege Nitsure as saying. Among sectors, constructi­on was hit the hardest, contractin­g by 50.3%, matched only by the trade, hotel, transport and communicat­ion sector, which declined 47%. Manufactur­ing contracted 39.3%. The agricultur­e sector provided the only silver lining, growing by 3.4%.

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