With regard to China, it said the country will slow down from 6.9 per cent in 2017 to 6.6 per cent this year
The economy is expected to grow at 6.6% in the current financial year ending March 31
In the medium term, GST alone may add 40 bps to GDP growth through productivity gains, HSBC noted
No sign of sustainable high growth yet - but fiscal concerns re-emerge
Both consumption and exports are picking up and this in turn should lead to an improvement in corporate revenues
Manufacturing recovers; agri, services growth down
Economic growth in India had slowed down over the last two quarters
Economy seems to have shaken off note ban, GST effects
Keki Mistry, CEO, HDFC, anticipates that the next quarter will see a good jump in the GDP numbers
For July-September, the median in a Reuters poll of economists was for annual growth of 6.4 per cent
The initial estimates for growth in the second quarter 2017-18 will be announced on November 30
It observed that growth rate in agriculture sector is a point of concern
All but three of 23 respondents who answered an extra question said the government had imposed too many sweeping changes for the economy in a short period of time
After scoring higher for two yrs, Unctad report pegs India's rate at 6.7% in 2017, down from 7% in 2016
India's economic growth slipped to a three-year low of 5.7 per cent in April-June
GVA grew 5.6% in Apr-Jun, but this is 2 percentage points lower than Q1 of FY17, when deceleration began
Experts weigh in on the impact of demonetisation and GST on India's economic growth
The economy is likely to expand in the range of 6.1-6.7 per cent in the first quarter of the current financial year driven largely by agriculture and government expenditure against 6.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of the previous financial year. ICRA expects GDP to rise by 6.1% in Q1, FY'18, at the same rate as was witnessed in the fourth quarter of 2016-17, says its principal economist Aditi Nayar. However, she expects gross value added, the summation of agriculture,industry and services to grow by 6.3 per cent due to sharp increase in the government's subsidies in the just-concluded quarter on front loading of expenditure. GDP is GVA plus indirect taxes minus subsidies. Nayar attributes her expectation of modest growth to the disruption in production schedules and discounts offered ahead of the implementation of the goods and services tax (GST); the impact of the appreciation of the rupee relative to the dollar on export earnings; and specific issues related to sectors ...
More than 60% of people surveyed believed growth rate will range between 6.5-7.5% over 12-18 months
IMF has also maintained the same global economic growth rate at 3.5% in 2017