Economic Survey Projects 8-8.5% GDP Growth In FY23 - Eastern Mirror
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
image
India

Economic Survey projects 8-8.5% GDP growth in FY23

6092
By PTI Updated: Feb 01, 2022 1:37 am
2022 1img31 Jan 2022 PTI01 31 2022 000149B
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman with Ministers of State of Finance Bhagwat Karad & Pankaj Chaudhary, and the members of Budget Division during a pre-Budget photo session, on the eve of presentation of Budget 2022-23 in the Parliament, in New Delhi, Monday, Jan. 31, 2022. (PTI)

New Delhi, Jan. 31 (PTI): India will retain its tag of the world’s fastest-growing major economy as the pre-Budget Economic Survey on Monday forecast an 8-8.5 per cent GDP growth in the fiscal year starting in April, saying it has the fiscal space to do more to support the economy and is well placed to meet the future challenges.

India is poised to wrest the title world-beating economy tag this fiscal with a projected growth of 9.2 per cent, and the widespread vaccine coverage, supply-side reforms and easing of regulations are going to support it in the next.

The Economic Survey — an annual report card of the economy — presented in Parliament by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, warned about risks from global inflation and pandemic-related disruptions.

Sitharaman is expected to announce plans to boost spending to revive investment and create jobs in her Budget to be presented on Tuesday.

The survey assumed oil prices will range between USD 70 and 75 per barrel next year even though they are above USD 90 now. It also assumed a normal monsoon rainfall and an orderly withdrawal of global liquidity by major central banks.

“The projection is based on the assumption that there will be no further debilitating pandemic related economic disruption, monsoon will be normal, withdrawal of global liquidity by major central banks will be orderly,” the survey said.

The growth projections are in line with the forecast by the World Bank but less than 9 per cent forecast of IMF. They are slightly higher than that predicted by S&P and Moody’s.

Jan 2022 PTI1 31 2022 0010100003

The growth will be supported by “widespread vaccine coverage, gains from supply-side reforms and easing of regulations, robust export growth, and availability of fiscal space to ramp up capital spending,” the survey said.

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

India is 85 per cent dependent on imports to meet its oil needs.

“The global environment still remains uncertain,” the survey said citing the planned withdrawal of monetary support by major central banks, including the US Federal Reserve.

Higher rates elsewhere could lead to capital outflows for India.

The survey said the year ahead is also well poised for a pick-up in private sector investment with the financial system in a good position to provide support to the revival of the economy.

The projection of 8-8.5 per cent growth in 2022-23 is not coming on a low base. Advance estimates already suggest real GDP growth of 9.2 per cent in 2021 22. On a pre-Covid base of 2019 20, this would tantamount to 10 per cent growth.

The Economic Survey has highlighted the agile approach to fiscal and monetary management that has been undertaken over the past years and recognises the risks faced by the Indian economy.

Higher oil prices would translate into relatively higher inflation rates.

The survey recognises that with high tax buoyancy, there would be enough fiscal space to sustain the growth momentum of the government’s capital expenditure while meeting the 2021-22 budgeted fiscal deficit of 6.8 per cent of GDP.

On the fiscal side, the main concern now is to calibrate a reduction path for the general government debt-GDP ratio which is estimated to touch 90 per cent in 2021-22 in the survey. This will result in high committed expenditures on account of interest payments relative to revenue receipts, thereby squeezing the fiscal space available for capital expenditures.

6092
By PTI Updated: Feb 01, 2022 1:37:32 am
Website Design and Website Development by TIS