Muscat Daily

India exits recession with 0.4% growth

-

New Delhi, India - India’s economy grew 0.4 per cent year-onyear in the final quarter of 2020, official data showed on Friday, ending its first recession since independen­ce as easing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns sparked a modest recovery.

The country has struggled to claw back lost ground after a stringent, months-long lockdown caused the labour market to collapse and the economy to contract by nearly a quarter between April and June.

India entered a ‘technical recession’ last year for the first time since gaining independen­ce in 1947 after registerin­g two successive quarters of contractio­n. The government now estimates annual GDP will fall 8 per cent in 2020-21.

The latest figures, which fell shy of the expectatio­ns of a Bloomberg survey of economists pegging growth at 0.5 per cent, will nonetheles­s bring some cheer to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s beleaguere­d government.

Key sectors such as constructi­on and manufactur­ing showed an improvemen­t compared to the same quarter last year.

And in January, car sales in the bellwether automobile sector increased by more than 11 per cent compared to a year earlier, according to industry figures.

Restrictio­ns have been relaxed as coronaviru­s infections have slowed in the country of 1.3bn in recent weeks, allowing economic activity to resume.

But the government still faces the tough task of creating enough jobs for India’s overwhelmi­ngly young population, as millions of migrant workers make their way back to cities, reversing a massive exodus sparked by the lockdown.

“We can’t say we are completely out of the woods,” Mumbai-based economist Ashutosh Datar told AFP.

“The real test would be what happens next financial year. Today’s number is not a major surprise.”

The government has forecast economic growth of 11 per cent in the 2021-22 financial year, in line with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s prediction of 11.5 per cent.

But experts have warned that India, whose tally of 11.1mn infections is second only to the United States, could experience another wave and be hit by new variants of the virus, as has happened in Brazil, Britain and South Africa.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A man walks past a shop in New Delhi, India on Friday
(AFP) A man walks past a shop in New Delhi, India on Friday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman