Explained: What to look for in GDP data today – The Indian Express

Written by Udit Misra, Edited by Explained Desk | New Delhi | Updated: August 31, 2020 7:44:57 amMigrant labourers return to New Delhi from parts of Uttar Pradesh on August 10, 2020. In large numbers, workers had left the city due to the Covid-19 lockdown. (Express Photo: Praveen Khanna)

Monday is a crucial day for the Indian economy. The National Statistical Office (NSO) under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) will come out with the GDP estimates for the first quarter (April, May, June) of the current financial year.Observers of the Indian economy keenly await the NSO data because it will provide the first benchmark of the state of the Indian economy after the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted it and forced the country into widespread and repeated lockdowns.

What do we know about the current state of economy?

The past week provided several key developments that provide the context to the GDP numbers.

RBI Annual Report: The first thing to note is that the RBIs annual year is different from the regular financial year. For Indias central bank, the annual report of 2019-20 pertains to the period between July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2020.

This otherwise perfunctory fact is relevant this year because RBIs year included the first quarter (April, May June) of the current financial year. This is the quarter that saw the maximum disruption of economic activity and as such everyone wanted to know what RBI made of this period.

The RBI, however, refrained from providing a clear number for GDP growth or contraction but it did state that an assessment of aggregate demand during the year so far suggests that the shock to consumption is severe, and it will take quite some time to mend and regain the pre-COVID-19 momentum.

GST council meeting: Equally ominous were the words of Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, who, while talking to the Chief Ministers of other non-BJP ruled states, suggested reverting to the pre-GST regime. Thackeray was responding to a GST Council meeting where the Union government expressed its inability to pay the compensation amount roughly Rs 2.35 lakh crore that was due to the states under the GST regime.

This suggestion could have wide-ranging ramifications for the economy if it is pursued by some of the biggest states in a serious manner.

As different states try to recover from the impact of Covid-19, they need money, but the current GST regime has robbed the states of the freedom to raise or lower taxes. Being asked to borrow money from the market instead of getting it from the Centre has made Thackeray question the desirability of the current GST regime. (Dont miss from Explained: Issues in GST compensation)

Export Preparedness Index: The index launched by NITI Aayog ranked Indian states and Union Territories in the context of export preparedness in terms of policy environment, infrastructure etc.

The top performers were mostly coastal states such as Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Odisha but there was one landlocked state that managed to sneak into the top 5 list and it was Rajasthan.

At the other end of the spectrum were mostly landlocked and Himalayan states such as Jammu & Kashmir, Bihar and Assam. But West Bengal stood out for being ranked 22 out of the 36 states and UTs despite being a big coastal state.

Express Explainedis now onTelegram. Clickhere to join our channel (@ieexplained)and stay updated with the latest

A crucial takeaway from this report was the need for states to work on their unique strategy for boosting exports. This again ties in with Thackerays demand to have greater leeway.

McKinsey employment report: The McKinsey Global Institutes report on Indias employment needs stated that India will have to create at least 90 million non-farm jobs over the next decade 145 million at the upper end and for which it would have to grow at 8 to 8.5 per cent every year (see chart below). This provides an understanding of how job creation may be affected because of GDP contraction or slow growth in the coming years.

Review of ease-of-doing-business rankings: On August 27, the World Bank issued a statement saying that it has ordered a systematic review and internal audit of its data and methodology used for compiling the Ease of Doing Business rankings that were published in 2017 and 2019.

The move is in response to several allegations that data was tweaked for political reasons and to favour some countries. It is important to note that Indias ranking improved from 142 in 2014 to 63 in 2019.

All of the past weeks concerns from plummeting domestic consumption to shrinking exports to massive unemployment to question marks on Indias Ease of Doing Business rankings and GST regime provide a useful bridge to the big event in the coming week.

What can one expect from the GDP data?

The first quarter saw the strictest lockdowns across the country and chances are it will see the sharpest fall in economic activity in a long while.

The composition of growth (or de-growth) in other words, which sector got hit the most will set the tone for the rest of the year. The amount and nature of the damage will point to the type and magnitude of fiscal and monetary policy efforts required to revive the Indian economy.

Most analysts expect the economy to contract sharply. But the expected magnitude of contraction differs sometimes substantially over specific sectors of the economy.

For instance, State Bank of Indias Saumya Kanti Ghosh expects the GDP contraction to be 16%, while Madan Sabnavis of CARE Ratings expects it to be around 20% and Aditi Nayar of ICRA Ltd expect an even bigger contraction of 25%.

Beyond the variation in headline growth numbers, if one compares specific sectors (Charts 2 and 3); one can find two broad trends:

How difficult is it to make these estimates and what is their significance?

It is true that GDP projections over the past year or so have increasingly shortened shelf life. For instance, last year in July, when Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented the full-year Budget, she pencilled in an 8% real GDP growth. But with each passing month, the projections continued to be scaled back as the underlying economy decelerated faster than expected. Eventually, India ended the year with just 4%.

In this financial year, making these estimates and projections is even more difficult because Covids spread in India has been much worse than the governments expectation. In the early days, the government had expected that India would have no new Covid cases after May 16. In reality, India not only added around 5,000 new cases on May 16 but also overhauled Chinas tally of over 80,000 cases.

As India has tried to open up for work, Covid cases have surged. Last week, India registered the highest single-day count of new Covid cases anywhere in the world since the start of the pandemic. It is now the third-most afflicted country on the planet. What is most worrisome is that the rate of spread of Covid in Indias rural areas is almost twice the rate of spread in urban areas.

All of this points to uncertainty about the shape of economic recovery. In this context, Mondays data would provide the first benchmark around which future analysis can happen.

The Indian Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@indianexpress) and stay updated with the latest headlines

For all the latest Explained News, download Indian Express App.

The Indian Express (P) Ltd

Read the original:

Explained: What to look for in GDP data today - The Indian Express

Related Posts

Comments are closed.