[The GDP growth rate was tweaked a bit by it in February to put India
on a higher trajectory, giving itself an added 2.2% growth as a bonus.
... t just means that in the year since the United Progressive
Alliance went out, the GDP has grown a mere 0.5%, but this government
claims a healthy GDP growth of 7.4% allowing it to ecstatically claim
outpacing China. Take out the bonus of 2.2% it gave itself and you
have a more plausible growth of 5.2%, which is in line with the
International Monetary Fund forecast.
...
India adds 10 lakh people to its work force every month. During the
quarter October-December 2014, only 1.17 lakh jobs were created. What
should cause us concern is the steady on the decline in job growth in
the first three quarters of the year. It has declined from 1.82 lakhs
in the first quarter to 1.58 lakhs in the second quarter. Thus, the
total of jobs created in the first three quarters of 2014-15 therefore
add to 4.57 lakh. At this rate, even if take the highest figure of job
creation in 2014 for the first quarter of 2014 as the likely jobs to
be created in the fourth quarter January-March 2015, the total jobs
created would be somewhere around 5.40 lakh. Clearly, even if we
accept the government’s growth, we are still witnessing jobless
growth. This has been the malaise of the Indian economy for the past
three decades.]

http://scroll.in/article/731305/to-understand-indias-economic-growth-numbers-you-need-to-know-this-russian-joke

To understand India's economic growth numbers, you need to know this
Russian joke
The government has not yet realised that an economy as large as
India’s needs time and space to pick up traction.
Mohan Guruswamy  · Yesterday · 11:30 am

The Russians have a great joke on every misfortune they have to
endure. One of the best I have heard is about Lenin, Stalin,
Khrushchev and Brezhnev traveling together on a train when it
unexpectedly stops. Then come suggestions to fix the problem. Lenin
suggests a subbotnik or day of voluntary labor so that workers and
peasants can fix the problem. Nothing happens. Stalin puts his head
out of the window and shouts that if the train doesn’t move
immediately the engine driver will be shot. Nothing happens.
Khrushchev then suggests to have the rails from behind put in front so
that the train can start moving. Nothing happens. When his turn comes,
Brezhnev says: “Comrades, lets draw the curtains, turn on the
gramophone and pretend we are moving!” There is a similar air of eyes
shut make believe in this government’s first year euphoria.

***The GDP growth rate was tweaked a bit by it in February to put
India on a higher trajectory, giving itself an added 2.2% growth as a
bonus.*** [Emphasis added.] In China, this propensity is called adding
some water to the milk. Too bad it was not announced by the Manmohan
Singh government because then the growth in its last year would have
been a good-looking 6.9% instead of the dismal 4.7% calculated then.
***It just means that in the year since the United Progressive
Alliance went out, the GDP has grown a mere 0.5%, but this government
claims a healthy GDP growth of 7.4% allowing it to ecstatically claim
outpacing China. Take out the bonus of 2.2% it gave itself and you
have a more plausible growth of 5.2%, which is in line with the
International Monetary Fund forecast.*** [Emphasis added.]

***The GDP growth 2010-'11 was calculated based on factor cost, which
has now been changed to constant prices to take into account gross
value addition in goods and services as well as indirect taxes.
Besides, the base year has been shifted to 2011-'12 from 2004-05
earlier.*** [Emphasis added.] This revision has led to some economists
including Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan seeking “more
clarity”. But it seems the government is paying no heed to this. The
curtains have been drawn and they are making believe that they now
have the nation on a high-speed train.

Demand contracts

Thankfully, there are other yardsticks to measure the nations economic
well-being. Consumption being the largest component of GDP, gives a
good indication as to how the economy is moving. The government itself
admits that: “While the growth in intermediate goods remained
sluggish, consumer goods contracted in April-December 2014-'15,
particularly due to contraction in the consumer durables sector.”
***The sale of commercial vehicles is usually a good indication about
how an economy is faring. In 2013-'14, the sales was 632,851 vehicles
and in 2014-'15 it has dropped to 614,961 vehicles or a decline of
2.83%. The growth of motorcycle sales, which are considered a
bellwether of the rural economy, has now become sluggish. While two
wheeler sales rose by 8.09% to hit 1.60 million in 2015, motorcycles
have only grown by 2.5% to 1.07 million.*** [Emphasis added.]

There is even one more telling development that captures the rural
distress of the past year. It is the sales of tractors. ***Between
2003-'04 and 2013-'14, domestic tractor sales more than trebled from
under 1.9 lakh to over 6.3 lakh units. Last year it plummeted to 5.51
lakhs. The last decade of high growth led to large-scale job creation
in construction, manufacturing and the services sector. Between
2004-04 and 2011-'12, an estimated 37 million people left the farm
sector. The resultant labor shortages were reflected in rural wages,
which grew by 15%-20% each year. During the past year, rural wages
only grew by 6%. Bad weather and a global bull run in commodities too
took their toll. But if you are claiming credit for what you think
went well, its only fair that you bear this too.*** [Emphasis added.]

But what is worrisome is that another indicator, probably the most
important one to indicate whether an industrial recovery is underway,
is not encouraging at all. According to a report, the demand for power
on May 23 was 134,892 MW or about half the installed capacity. On the
same day in 2014 it was 129,575 MW. This small difference in peak
power demand between the years is cause for concern. The government
claims an industrial revival is underway; but the numbers don’t
support it. ***All over the country as many as 57 thermal power units
are shut down due to lack in demand*** [emphasis added.]. Its little
wonder then that BHEL has reported a decline in sales of 24% in
2014-'15.

But Power Minister Piyush Goyal looks at it quite differently.
According to him India achieved the highest growth in power generation
capacity in the past one year. India added a record 22,566 MW of
generation capacity in 2014-'15. A power project takes about 4-10
years to fructify, if all goes well. So there is nothing here for
Goyal to crow about. The foundation for this was laid by the previous
regime.

But what is of more interest is his claim that it is his government
that has brought down the power deficit to 3.6%, the lowest in India’s
recent history. According to him it is because Coal India produced a
record 32 million tons. Once again gestation times for new coal mining
are long and the groundwork was done earlier. No wonder the Congress
party gets so incensed about everything positive it has done being
arrogated to itself by this government? Then there is the
all-important question of what use is increased capacity if
consumption demand remains flat?

Jobless growth

***India adds 10 lakh people to its work force every month. During the
quarter October-December 2014, only 1.17 lakh jobs were created. What
should cause us concern is the steady on the decline in job growth in
the first three quarters of the year. It has declined from 1.82 lakhs
in the first quarter to 1.58 lakhs in the second quarter. Thus, the
total of jobs created in the first three quarters of 2014-15 therefore
add to 4.57 lakh. At this rate, even if take the highest figure of job
creation in 2014 for the first quarter of 2014 as the likely jobs to
be created in the fourth quarter January-March 2015, the total jobs
created would be somewhere around 5.40 lakh. Clearly, even if we
accept the government’s growth, we are still witnessing jobless
growth. This has been the malaise of the Indian economy for the past
three decades.*** [Emphasis added.]

Finally, there is one big lesson our politicians must learn. It is
that economic growth is cyclic. It goes up and down according to the
energies and forces released during its growth trajectory. Hence the
trend is what is more important. During the ten UPA years, the GDP
grew at an average of 7.4%. It only went southward during the last two
years, but it darkened the public mood. The UPA didn’t help itself
when the penchant of certain individuals in it to help themselves
became public.

Clearly the Modi government has not yet realised that an economy as
large as India’s doesn’t grow in bursts of speed. It needs time and
space to pick up traction. Like that Russian train, neither collective
action, nor threats, nor wild policy innovations will spur it forward.
It needs to first build up steam to get traction forward. Drawing the
shutters down and pretending it’s racing ahead is delusional.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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