GDP grows 7% in Q3 despite notes ban, manufacturing sector surprises with 8.3% growth
The Indian economy shrugged off demonetization blues in the
third quarter of financial year 2016-17 to register a healthy 7 per cent GDP
growth rate, albeit lower than the 7.4 per cent in the previous quarter.
The Central Statistical Office on Tuesday also projected a
7.1 per cent growth rate for the full fiscal; the Reserve Bank of India and the
Economic Survey have projected GDP growth of 6.9 per cent and 6.5 per cent,
respectively.
Commenting on the numbers, Economic Affairs Secretary
Shaktikanta Das said, “GDP numbers negate the impact of demonetization. We
maintained 7 per cent growth”.
The biggest surprises, though, were the manufacturing and
construction sectors, which recorded 8.3 per cent and 2.7 per cent growth,
respectively.
The cash crunch following demonetization had been widely
expected to dent consumer spending over concerns that companies would cut
production to prevent inventory pile-up. The sharp turnaround in investment
activity, to a growth of 3.5 per cent in Q3 FY2017 from the contraction in H1
FY2017, was unexpected, ratings agency ICRA said.
The growth coming from the bumper kharif crop and
manufacturing too belied the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) projection
last week that growth would slow to 6 per cent in the second half of the
financial year.
Agriculture, which accounts for 15% of GDP, is expected to
have a strong showing in FY17, with whole-year food grain production estimated
at a record high of 272 million tonnes.
Ashutosh Khajuria, Executive Director, Federal Bank, said,
“With the bumper kharif crop and the expected bumper rabi crop, agriculture is
going to be a big contributor to the GDP numbers. The better-than-expected GDP
numbers could also be as the white economy was not impacted and the adverse
impact was borne by the parallel black economy.”
The advance estimate was released to help government make
the Budget which was presented one month in advance.
In a statement CSO said, “Agriculture and allied sector
growth estimated at 4.4 5 in 2016-17, up from 0.8% last fiscal. Advance GDP
growth estimate for current fiscal is now at 7.1%, unchanged from its earlier
projection.
Aditi Nayar, Principal Economist, ICRA Limited, said, “The
biggest surprises in Q3 FY2017 were posed by the 8.3%manufacturing growth and
the 2.7% rise in construction activities, with the latter expected to have been
adversely affected by the cash crunch. The sharp turnaround in investment
activity, to a growth of 3.5% in Q3 FY2017 from the contraction in H1 FY2017 is
also unexpected. Moreover, some other indicators offer surprising trends. For
instance, rural wage inflation recorded a marginal dip to 6.0% in December 2016
from 6.2% in October 2016, despite the expectation of loss of jobs in
less-formal urban sectors pushing migrants to return to their villages.
RBI in its policy on February 8 had said, “Growth is
expected to recover sharply in 2017-18 on account of several factors.” It was
banking on consumer spending bringing cash back in the economy which in turn
would spur retail and also revive bank funding to projects.
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