Prime Minister Narendra Modi

India’s FY21 GDP To Fall 4.5%: FICCI Survey

July 13, 2020

With economic activities coming to a halt amid the Covid-19 pandemic and the lockdown, the Indian economy is expected to record a negative 4.5 percent growth rate in the current financial year, according to the FICCI’s Economic Outlook Survey.

The minimum and maximum growth estimate stood at (-) 6.4 percent and 1.5 percent, respectively, for FY21, it said. The quarterly median forecasts indicated 14.2 percent contraction in the gross domestic product (GDP) in the first quarter of FY21, it added.

The signs of an impending slowdown have been sharply accentuated by the Covid-19 pandemic-induced lockdown. The Covid-19 pandemic has severely hit global as well as domestic growth.

The current round of the survey, conducted in June, drew responses from leading economists representing industry, banking, and financial services sectors.

The economic activity-wise annual forecast indicated a median growth of 2.7 percent for agriculture and allied activities for FY21. Agriculture seems to be the only sector with a silver lining.

There’s an apparent upside as far as the performance of monsoon was concerned this year with enough water in reservoirs, it said.

The rural sector, supported by a steady agriculture performance and hopefully a limited number of Covid-19 cases, will be a key demand generator this year, as per the survey.

Further, the direct income support through the PM-KISAN and increased allocation to MGNREGA were helping the returnee migrants, lending support to the rural economy, it showed.

The industry and services sectors are expected to contract by 11.4 percent and 2.8 percent, respectively. “Weak demand and subdued capacity utilisation were manifesting into a drag on investment, and the pandemic has further extended the timeline for recovery,” it said.

Even though activity in some sectors, like consumer durables and FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods), is gaining traction, most companies are still operating at low capacity utilisation rates. Labour availability and feeble demand remain major issues.

Therefore, fresh investments would be difficult to come by in the near-to-medium term, the survey predicted.

Absence of demand stimulus, a second wave of the pandemic and continuation of social distancing and quarantine measures would weigh heavily on growth prospects, it said.

“With demand and investment outlook muted, robust government expenditure has been the only saviour. Nonetheless, growth is likely to bottom out after the second quarter of FY21,” FICCI survey said.

Read Today’s ePaper

Also Read: ‘India Seeing Green Shoots Of Economic Recovery’

Also Read: COVID-19 Support: India Receives $2.75 Bn From World Bank

Previous Story

UAE Raps Hagia Sophia Alteration

Next Story

Gates Seeks Vaccine For All Patients

Latest from -Top News

G42 AI tool boosts procurement by 40%

Abu Dhabi’s tech giant leads the charge in AI-driven operational transformation with (In)Business Procurement platform. Abu Dhabi-based global technology powerhouse G42 has

UN urges investments in Syria

Rebuilding Syria requires not only emergency relief but sustained investment in basic services, economic recovery, and stability, says UN Office in Syria.