CRISIL said it expected the
current quarter's GDP to shrink 25 per cent year on year.
Fitch
ratings, CRISIL, and SBI Research have drastically cut India’s economic
growth forecast in the current fiscal year due to a prolonged lockdown. While
both Fitch and CRISIL projected the economy to contract 5 per cent, from their
earlier estimates of the economic growth at 0.8 per cent and 1.8 per cent,
respectively, SBI Research slashed economic contraction to 6.8 per cent from
earlier 4.7 per cent.
CRISIL said it expected the
current quarter’s GDP to shrink 25 per cent year on year.
In its latest report, CRISIL
said it would really be a long road to recovery and going back to the
pre-Covid-19 trend level of gross domestic product (GDP) in India will not be
possible for the next three fiscal years. The lockdown extension, higher
economic costs, and an economic package that lacked muscle are the three key
reasons why CRISIL has downgraded the GDP forecast.
“The economic costs, now
beginning to show up in the hard numbers, are far worse than our initial
expectations. Given one of the most stringent lockdowns in the world, April
could well be the worst-performing month for India this fiscal year,” it said.
Though the agency expects
non-agricultural GDP to contract 6 per cent, agriculture could cushion the blow
by growing at 2.5 per cent in FY21, CRISIL said.
SBI also calculated GDP
growth taking bottom-to-top approach than earlier top-to-bottom one. As such,
group chief economic advisor Soumya Kanti Ghosh estimated the district-wise,
zone-wise loss in GSDP for each state and found that total GSDP loss due to
Covid-19 for states stands at Rs 30.3 trillion, which is 13.5 per cent of total
GSDP.
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