India GDP To Contract By 9.5 Percent In FY21 Due To Second Lockdown Wave: ICRA

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The domestic rating agency ICRA has revised its forecast for contraction in India’s GDP in FY21 to 9.5 percent from 5 percent it expected earlier, as continued lockdowns in some states have affected the recovery seen in May and June. Most of the analysts have projected the country’s GDP to contract in the range of 5-6.5 percent in this fiscal.

“We have sharply revised our forecast for the contraction in Indian GDP in FY21 (at constant 2011-12 prices), to 9.5 percent from our earlier assessment of 5 percent, with the climbing COVID-19 infections resulting in a spate of localised lockdowns in some states and cities, arresting the nascent recovery that had set in during May-June 2020,” the rating agency said in a report.

It said the country’s economy may have contracted by a sharp 25 percent in the first quarter of FY21, and expects a shallow recovery in the subsequent quarters, with a contraction of 12.4 percent in the second quarter of FY21 and a milder 2.3 percent in the third quarter, followed by a growth of 1.3 percent in the fourth quarter of FY21.

ICRA said that the Indian economy had started to recover from the troughs experienced in April 2020, when the lockdown was at its severest, and many sectors seemed to be adjusting to the new normal.

However, the unabated rise in COVID-19 infections in the unlock phase and re-imposition of localised lockdowns in several states appear to have interrupted this recovery.

The rating agency, however, expects rural economy to partly counter the slowdown in urban economy, and is optimistic regarding the outlook for agricultural growth and rural consumption.

It expects agricultural GVA to rise by 3.5-4 percent in FY21, supporting rural sentiments.

ICRA has, however, tempered its expectations regarding the extent of fiscal support that may be forthcoming, given the revenue shock being experienced by various levels of governments, it said.