India Economic Update, September 2012
Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth has slowed to a nine year low of 6.5 percent for FY2011-12, from 8.4 percent in the two previous years. The slowdown was most pronounced in the industrial sector, and more specifically in manufacturing and m...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC
2017
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/194611468049195508/India-economic-update http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27069 |
Summary: | Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth
has slowed to a nine year low of 6.5 percent for FY2011-12,
from 8.4 percent in the two previous years. The slowdown was
most pronounced in the industrial sector, and more
specifically in manufacturing and mining. In the quarter
ending in June 2012, industrial output growth as measured by
the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) has been negative.
The contraction was particularly pronounced in the
production of capital goods, which is in line with falling
investment demand on the expenditure side of the National
Accounts. The current account deficit reached a record 4.2
percent of GDP in FY2011-12, because of decelerating export
growth and high crude prices. Merchandise exports grew by 41
percent in September 2011, but their growth slowed to 2
percent by August 2012 (measured as 12-months cumulative
exports compared with the same 12 months of the previous
year). Inflation reached 7.6 percent in August 2012. This
represents a marked slowdown since September 2011, but there
has been an uptick in food prices in recent months. Also,
higher domestic prices for fuel, which are necessary to rein
in spending on subsidies, will contribute to inflationary
pressure. Inflation is therefore expected to reach 8 percent
at end-March 2013. Real GDP growth is forecast to reach
around 6.0 percent in FY2012-13, after 5.3 percent growth Q4
of FY2011-12 and 5.5 percent growth in Q1 of FY2012-13. The
slowdown is at least partly caused by structural problems.
These include power shortages, which are partly caused by
the financial difficulties facing the electricity sector as
discussed in the special topic section of this update, the
corruption scandals that have hit the mining and telecom
sectors, investor uncertainty because of pending changes in
legislation (mining, taxes, land acquisition), and the
tightening constraints of land and infrastructure. Tighter
macroeconomic policies, slow growth in the core Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries,
and worries about another global recession also weigh on
growth. Important signals to revive domestic growth drivers
to lift sentiment more than produce instant efficiency gains
could come from reforms recently announced and, more
importantly, the reform of direct taxes, the implementation
of the long-delayed Goods and Services Tax (GST), and
passage of the land acquisition and mining bills. This
update also looks closely at two important topics for
medium- and long-term growth, namely India's Right to
Education (RTE) Act, which aims to shape elementary
education, and the financial difficulties in the Indian
power sector. |
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