India’s GDP Expected To Contract By 6.4 Percent In FY21: Care Ratings

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Further revising down the GDP forecast for FY21 due to the extended COVID-19 induced lockdown, Care Ratings on has revised India’s GDP growth forecast for the current financial year to (-) 6.4 percent. In May, the agency had projected a decline in GDP growth of 1.5-1.6 percent in FY21.

It said given that the nation is into a lockdown for July too with several restrictions on resumption of services in particular as well as movement of people, the cut-off date for normalcy will spread into the latter part of the third quarter and more likely to the fourth quarter.

“Under these assumptions our forecast for GDP growth is now (-) 6.4 percent for FY21 with GVA (de)growth estimated to be around (-) 6.1 percent,” Care Ratings said in a report.

The sharper fall in real GDP also means that the nominal GDP for the year will also decline assuming inflation of 5 percent which in turn will affect the projected fiscal deficit number of the central government which will be in the region of 8 percent for FY21, it said.

In FY20, the country’s economy grew at an estimated 4.2 percent, almost a decade low.

It, however, said the positive growth will come from only agriculture and the government sector.

GDP forecasts for FY21 are unique as they would be varying depending on the evolving situation and the assumptions being made on the recovery process in the country, the report said.

The agency said its assumption now is that two-third of the economic sectors would broadly be operating at 50-70 percent capacity by the end of third quarter and the balance may not even reach this state this year.

Services like hospitality, tourism, entertainment, travel would take a much longer time pan India to resume anywhere close to normal with interstate restrictions being the norm for the next quarter or so, the report said.

“The restriction on movement of people translates into fall in demand for goods and services and further exacerbates the low-consumption growth syndrome that pervaded for three years now,” it said.

Job losses and pay cuts will add to the stickiness in spending even during the festival time, the agency said adding, β€œIt is assumed that good rural income cannot compensate for this loss of purchasing power which is topped with uncertainty.