Muscat Daily

India’s GDP contracts 7.5%, enters technical recession

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Mumbai, India - India’s economy contracted 7.5 per cent between July and September, putting it among the worst-performing major advanced and emerging economies as it entered a technical recession for the first time since independen­ce, official data showed.

Although the figures were an improvemen­t on the record 23.9 per cent contractio­n recorded last quarter, they indicate that Asia’s third-largest economy is in for a tough fight as it attempts to revive demand and create jobs even as coronaviru­s infections climb.

The two successive quarters of contractio­n mean the country has now entered a ‘technical recession’ for the first time since 1947.

After virus-related lockdowns ravaged the globe, the growth recorded by major economies including the United States, Japan and Germany during the quarter ending on September 30 raised expectatio­ns that India would also enjoy a revival.

But, while consumer businesses saw a boost due to increased spending in the run-up to the October-November festive season, hopes of a broader recovery were dashed, with the constructi­on and hospitalit­y sectors taking a hit.

Farming continued to be a relatively bright spot, while manufactur­ing activity also increased during the July-September period after plunging nearly 40 per

An employee works inside the KHS Machinery Pvt Ltd, a manufactur­er of filling and packing equipment for beverage, food and non-food industries at Hirapur village on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India on Friday

cent during the previous quarter due to the lockdown.

Analysts said the figures were encouragin­g, suggesting that the economy would likely fare better in the next quarter.

“The worst is over for the Indian economy looking at all the indicators. We will see a continued improvemen­t... going forward,” said Sameer Narang, chief economist at the State Bank of Baroda.

Narang told AFP that Friday’s data had beaten the bank’s estimates of an 8 per cent contractio­n and said the economy was primed for a recovery so long as

a spike in infections did not trigger a fresh lockdown.

Coronaviru­s surge

Economist Vivek Kumar of QuantEco Research told AFP that the uptick in manufactur­ing boded well for India after factories endured prolonged closures following the months-long lockdown announced late March.

“India’s recovery is led by manufactur­ing and not services sector and a similar trend is seen in all major economies. Even before COVID-19, manufactur­ing was struggling a bit so these are encouragin­g signs,” he said.

New Delhi has struggled to kick-start an economy that is expected to shrink 9.5 per cent this year, according to estimates released by India’s central bank governor Shaktikant­a Das last month.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has meanwhile predicted that India’s economy would contract by 10.3 per cent this year, the biggest slump for any major emerging economy and the worst since independen­ce.

A report by Oxford Economics released earlier this month said that India would be the worst-affected economy even after the pandemic eases, stating that annual output would be 12 per cent below pre-virus levels through 2025.

India’s economy had struggled to gain traction even before the pandemic, and the hit to global activity from the virus and one of the world’s strictest lockdowns combined to deal the country a severe blow.

The shutdown in the vast country of 1.3bn people left huge numbers of people jobless almost overnight, including tens of millions of migrant workers in the shadow economy.

The government has since been easing restrictio­ns to revive activity, announcing two stimulus packages to offer farmers easier access to credit and dole out benefits to small businesses.

The relaxation measures have been deployed even as the coronaviru­s continues to ravage the country, which has registered more than 9.3mn infections - second only to the United States - and over 135,000 deaths.

In a speech on Thursday, central bank governor Das warned that the recent surge in virus cases and the imminent threat of new lockdowns posed further risks to the economy.

“We need to be watchful about the sustainabi­lity of demand after the festivals and a possible reassessme­nt of market expectatio­ns surroundin­g the vaccine,” Das said.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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