A look at six indicators shows all of them have collapsed from positive growth in April to contraction in Sept.
Finance
minister Nirmala
Sitharaman told the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday the country was not
in recession yet, and won’t ever be.A set of data arriving in a day
may qualify the statement to some extent. The Ministry of Statistics
and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) will release the data on gross
domestic product (GDP) for the July to September quarter of the
fiscal year 2019-20 (Q2FY20) on Friday.
Raising
slowdown concerns, economists whom Business Standard earlier spoke to
have concurred on one thing: The growth in GDP in Q2 would be between
4.2 and 4.7 per cent, slower than the 5 per cent achieved in Q1.
The
actual data could be more serious as the lowest-ever quarterly growth
clocked since 2012-13 (when the new GDP series began) was 4.3 per
cent, in the March quarter of FY13, when India was battling high
inflation and political turmoil, in addition to pressures from the
global
economy.
Representative
data for the July-September quarter proves their point to a great
extent. A look at six indicators — imports, exports, rail freight
earnings, electricity and diesel consumption, and overall industrial
production — shows that all of them have collapsed from positive
growth in April to contraction in September.
These
indicators are a collage of manufacturing and services sector
indicators in the country, encompassing a substantial part of the
economy.
While
the growth in Q1 was 5 per cent with positive leading indicators, Q2
has been characterised by all indicators in red. Port traffic too has
stagnated, growing 0.4 per cent in the April–October period,
entirely brought down by a severe contraction in coal imports.
Growth
in consumption of fast-moving consumer goods, such as shampoo sachets
and coconut oil, has weakened to 2 per cent in Q2FY20, with the
stress concentrated in north Indian states.
Shubhada
Rao, chief economist at YES Bank, told Business
Standard that except services propelled by the government’s
budgetary funding, all the sectors of the economy are a drag on
growth in the September quarter.
But
she also said that the Indian economy is going through a transition
phase, and some near-term impact was expected.
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