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Indian Economy Bounces Back, Grows 6.1% In September Quarter

Momentum in the Indian economy picked up after five quarters of decline. 

Indian Economy Bounces Back, Grows 6.1% In September Quarter
(Source: BloombergQuint)

The Indian economy bounced back after five straight quarters of decline in growth, suggesting that the impact of twin shocks – demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax – has started to fade, albeit slowly.

The economy grew at 6.1 percent in gross value added (GVA) terms in the second quarter ended September, data released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation showed. Growth picked up from a three-year low of 5.6 percent in the first quarter, but remained lower than the 6.8 percent a year ago.

The number was largely in line with estimates. A Bloomberg poll of 46 economists had pegged GVA growth at 6.2 percent. GVA has become a preferred measure of economic growth as it strips out the impact of indirect taxes and subsidies.

Indian Economy Bounces Back, Grows 6.1% In September Quarter

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth, the more commonly used measure, stood at 6.3 percent compared to 5.7 percent in the first quarter of the financial year.

Commenting on the data, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that the second quarter marks the reversal of a five quarter declining trend in growth. “This additionally indicates that the impact of two significant reforms - demonetisation and GST - is behind us,” said Jaitley. He added that movement in GDP growth in the next two quarters should be upwards.

Indian Economy Bounces Back, Grows 6.1% In September Quarter

Among key sectors, growth picked up in manufacturing and mining, but slowed in agriculture.

  • The agriculture sector grew at 1.7 percent in Q2 compared to 2.3 percent in Q1
  • The manufacturing sector grew at 7 percent compared to 1.2 percent
  • The construction sector grew at 2.6 percent compared to 2 percent
  • The financial services sector grew at 5.7 percent compared to 6.4 percent
  • The government spending linked public administration segment grew at 6 percent in Q2 compared to 9.5 percent in Q1

While the overall numbers are a touch below expectations, core GVA growth, excluding agriculture and government spending, improved to 6.8 percent in the second quarter which is encouraging, said Shubhada Rao, chief economist at Yes Bank. Rao added that while growth is not as strong as what the markets had expected, directionally there have been no negative surprises.

Praveen Chakravarty, economist and visiting fellow at IDFC Institute pointed out that three key employment generating sectors - agriculture, construction and manufacturing - have still not recovered to pre-demonetisation level although there has been a rebound compared to previous quarters. “Trends are right but not the levels,” Chakravarty said in a discussion with BloombergQuint while adding that this suggests that a recovery is not complete.

Indian Economy Bounces Back, Grows 6.1% In September Quarter

A break-up of the expenditure side of the national income data suggested slower growth in private consumption and government spending. The Indian economy has been plagued by weak private investment for some time now, while government spending and private consumption have held steady. In the second quarter, private investment, as represented by growth in gross fixed capital formation, picked up to a five quarter high. Private consumption, however, weakened.

  • Gross fixed capital formation grew at 4.7 percent in Q2, the highest in the last five quarters.
  • In Q2, private consumption expenditure at constant prices grew by 6.5 percent, the lowest in the last eight quarters.
  • Government consumption expenditure grew at a weak 4.1 percent in Q2.

While growth in fixed capital formation picked up, Dharmakirti Joshi, chief economist at CRISIL pointed out that investment as a percentage of GDP continues to fall which is not a good sign. In the second quarter, gross fixed capital formation contributed 28.9 percent to GDP, lower than a year ago.

“For investment to truly turn around and become a driver, that ratio needs to bottom out,” he said. Capacity utilisation in the manufacturing sector is still on a downward trajectory and that too needs to change for a full scale reversal in investments, Joshi added. He also pointed to the declining capacity of the government to support growth due to its fiscal position. The government has utilised 96.1 percent of its fiscal deficit target for the current year in the April-October period.

The government’s ability to support growth is in question right now as the fiscal deficit numbers have also come in quite high.
Dharmakirti Joshi, Chief Economist, CRISIL

The higher growth will be a relief for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration which has been on the defensive due to weakening economic activity. Some fear that demonetisation and the implementation of GST, in quick succession, have weakened an already slowing economy.

While growth has come off its lows, it may remain slower than the pace of expansion seen in previous years. Speaking ahead of the GDP release on Thursday, the Finance Minister said that growth in India has ‘standardised’ between 7-8 percent.

Watch this conversation with India’s Chief Statistician TCA Anant.