The Asian Age

GDP growth overestima­ted by 2.5%: Former CEA

- RONOJOY MAZUMDAR

The country’s statistics may have been painting a far rosier picture of economic growth than the more modest reality of the past decade.

The nation has held the crown of the world’s fastest-growing major economy until recently, but a new study by former Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramania­n says the expansion was overestima­ted between 2011 and 2017. Rather than growing at about 7 per cent a year in that period, growth was about 4.5 per cent, according to the research paper, published by the Center for Internatio­nal Developmen­t at Harvard University.

The overestima­tion occurred after the previous Congress-led government changed the methodolog­y in calculatin­g gross domestic product in 2012. One of the key adjustment­s

was a shift to financial accounts-based data

compiled by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, from

volume-based data previously. This made GDP estimates more sensitive to price changes, in a period of lower oil prices, according to the research paper. Rather than deflate input values by input prices, the new methodolog­y deflated these values by output prices, which could have overstated manufactur­ing growth.

The latest study throws more doubt over India’s economic statistics.

“India must restore the reputation­al damage suffered to data generation in India across the board, from GDP to employment to government accounts,” Subramania­n said. “At the same time, the entire methodolog­y and implementa­tion for GDP estimation must be revisited by an independen­t task force.”

The most recent data shows India’s growth slowed to a five-year low in the first three months of the year.

 ??  ?? Arvind Subramania­n
Arvind Subramania­n

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