India's GDP will be just one per cent above the pre-pandemic level even after the estimated 9.2 per cent growth in FY22, RBI Deputy Governor M D Patra said
India Ratings has revised downwards its GDP growth forecast for 2021-22 to 8.6 per cent from the consensus 9.2 per cent projected earlier. The National Statistical Organisation (NSO), which has forecast 9.2 per cent real GDP growth for the year, will release the second advance estimate of national income on Monday. According to an India Ratings analysis, NSO is likely to peg the FY22 real gross domestic product growth at Rs 147.2 lakh crore. This translates into a GDP growth rate of 8.6 per cent, down from 9.2 per cent forecast in the first advance estimate released on January 7, 2022. The major reason for the likely downward revision is the upward revision of FY21 GDP to Rs 135.6 lakh crore in the first revised estimate of national income for FY21, which was released on January 31, 2022, the agency said. As a result, GDP for FY21 is improved to (-) 6.6 per cent from the provisional estimate of (-)7.3 per cent released on May 31, 2021. Besides this, the second revised estimate of
Foreign brokerage Barclays said the Indian economy is likely to have expanded by 6.6 per cent in the December quarter.
"The revision was made due to better-than-expected growth in revenue receipts and higher growth in the nominal GDP in FY22," the agency said
India's gross domestic product (GDP) is likely to grow at 5.8% in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 from October to December, says Ecowrap- SBI's research report.
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The Reserve Bank's growth projection for next financial year is lower than 8-8.5 per cent projected by the Finance Ministry in the recent Economic Survey
In a written reply to a query in the Lok Sabha, Chaudhary said the government has implemented several major reforms in recent years to boost investment and GDP growth
Sitharaman's Budget proposals focused on loosening the purse strings by boosting capital expenditure and going slow on fiscal consolidation are aimed in the right direction, the rating agency said
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CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said the Economic Survey's GDP growth forecast will catapult India as the fastest growing major economy of the world for two consecutive years
In order to achieve USD 5 trillion GDP by FY'25, India needs to spend about USD 1.4 trillion over this period on infrastructure, according to the Economic Survey
Raise the tax-GDP ratio to finance rising revenue expenditure
The pre-budget Economic Survey, which is tabled in Parliament ahead of the Union Budget to present the state of the economy, quite often misses on the GDP forecast, sometimes by a significant margin.
Many of their ideas, such as DBT, diesel deregulation, bad bank, flexible inflation targeting have been launched, some of them partially; others such as UBI, printing more money haven't taken off
On a calendar year basis, it projected India's GDP growth at 8.7 per cent in 2022 and 6.6 per cent in 2023
With the worst most likely behind it, the bruised Indian economy looks poised to regain its vitality. We look at the current state of the Indian economy and how some key sectors are performing
Healthy revenues, failing disinvestment, and rise in nominal GDP may take fiscal deficit from the Budgeted 6.8% of GDP to anywhere between 6.9% and 7.3%