[Three consecutive quarters of slowing growth, with Q4 even putting
India behind China, and it is now likely that the first quarter of
FY2017-18 will also feel the note ban impact. This suggests India
cannot get by just having weathered the demonetisation storm. Instead,
the economy needs the government’s promises of Modi’s move leading to
huge growth to come true. Supporters of the move have been promising a
“V-shaped” recovery – a big dip followed by a huge jump – for some
time now, but too big a dip could scare off investment and make the
uphill climb that much harder. And this year’s budget did not offer
any major sops from the government that could make up for how badly
demonetisation hurt the economy.]

https://scroll.in/article/839304/the-daily-fix-gdp-figures-finally-show-note-ban-effect-and-an-economy-on-shaky-ground

GDP figures finally show note ban effect and an economy on shaky ground

3 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

Hard work
The other shoe seems to have finally dropped. When Gross Domestic
Product growth figures for the third quarter (October-December) of
Fiscal Year 2016-’17 seemed to suggest that demonetisation had not
affected the economy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi mocked economists,
claiming that India’s people knew the difference between Harvard and
hard work. Apparently both do not have to be mutually exclusive.
Figures released by the Central Statistics Office on Wednesday
suggested that India’s economy, touted to be the fastest growing
worldwide, is skidding.

Numbers for Q4, January-March, were particularly dire. A poll of
economists surveyed by Reuters ahead of the data had estimated the Q4
figure would be 7.1%, faster than the 7% clocked in Q3, and also ahead
of the 6.9% recorded by China in the same period. Estimates ranged
from 6.5% to 7.8%. The first estimate from the Central Statistics
Office, however, has put the number much further behind at 6.1%. A
more careful look at the details suggests even more cause for concern.
Gross Value Added growth, the largest component of the headline GDP
number, dropped to 5.6% from 8.7% in the same period last year.
Removing “public administration, defence and other services”, the
portion of the data referring to government expenditure, the Q4 Gross
Value Added growth number comes down to 4.1%.

Clearly, demonetisation has had its impact. Investment demand fell
into negative territory. Industry growth for Q4 dropped to 3.1% from
the 6.2% it had clocked in Q3. Construction activity was also in the
red, at negative 3.7% year-on-year, compared to 3.4% in the previous
quarter. But demonetisation is not the only story here. Economic
growth has now fallen for three quarters consecutively, including one
quarter – July-September 2016 – that was completely unaffected by
Modi’s note ban move, which was announced in November. The first GDP
estimate for the entire fiscal year is 7.1%, down from 8% the previous
year. And this was in a year with a good monsoon.

Demonetisation was such a massive shock to the system that most
analysis has been focused on figuring out how it affected India’s
economy, especially because official GDP numbers can only estimate
what has happened in the informal sector that was hardest hit by the
note ban. This was even more so because the third quarter’s results
were perplexing, since they did not seem to show any effect of
demonetisation. Now it is clear that Modi’s massive effort has hit the
economy hard.

But the bigger picture is also troubling. Three consecutive quarters
of slowing growth, with Q4 even putting India behind China, and it is
now likely that the first quarter of FY2017-18 will also feel the note
ban impact. This suggests India cannot get by just having weathered
the demonetisation storm. Instead, the economy needs the government’s
promises of Modi’s move leading to huge growth to come true.
Supporters of the move have been promising a “V-shaped” recovery – a
big dip followed by a huge jump – for some time now, but too big a dip
could scare off investment and make the uphill climb that much harder.
And this year’s budget did not offer any major sops from the
government that could make up for how badly demonetisation hurt the
economy.

The government’s other big move, the Goods and Services Tax, has also
been touted as an effort that will lead to GDP growth, but that will
not come immediately. Indeed, it is likely that economic activity will
be affected as the move is rolled out across the country, starting
July. The one bit of good news is that the Met department expects this
year’s monsoon to be normal. With the economy headed onto a slippery
slope, India desperately needs that prediction to come true.


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Peace Is Doable

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