Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Latest News by Ashok Hindocha(M-9426201999)

6% growth in worst-case scenario: CEA

Rituparna Bhuyan & John Samuel Raja D / New Delhi April 22, 2009, 0:21 IST



The country’s economy is expected to grow by around 6 per cent in the current fiscal, even in the worst-case scenario of global recession prevailing till March 2010, according to Arvind Virmani, chief economic adviser in the Ministry of Finance.


Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials



- Sensex recovers partially, ends down 81pts
- Govt committed to sort issue of illegal money in foreign banks: Pranab
- Shree Cement books 1,000 Nanos on Earth Day
- SC to hear plea on money stashed in foreign banks on May 4
- Varun Gandhi files nomination from Pilibhit
- Gail plans pipeline from Andhra to MP
More


Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials




- 'How real are the figures on black money abroad?'
- Mumbai's municipal body raises taxes on leased offices
- 'One should look for outsiders only when the organisation is weak'
- 4 car models see demand outstrip supply
- 'I'm not here just to remain the fourth-largest IT company'
More



Also Read

News Now
Paper
Specials



- Q3 FY09 Results: Earnings Season
- Saving Satyam: Govt gets into action
- India-Pakistan Tensions: Fallout of Mumbai Terror Attack
- Your Money: Where to invest
- Market Crash: Global worries weigh
- Time Out: Books, fashion, food, travel, sports, health...

More


The growth projection matches with the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) estimate of 6 per cent expansion in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2009-10. But it is higher than the median forecast of 5.7 per cent by professional forecasters, according to a survey done by the central bank.

“The worst-case scenario assumes that the global economy would be still in recession till March 2010. Even in that scenario, I expect the Indian economy to grow by 6 per cent, plus or minus 0.5 per cent,” Virmani told Business Standard.

However, in the best-case scenario of the global economy recovering after September 2009, he predicts the growth rate of around 7 per cent in 2009-10.

In this case, the growth rate in the current fiscal would be similar to the previous one that ended in March 2008, where growth was bouyant in the first half before the global economic crisis put a spanner on expansion. “The implication (of best case scenario) is that the growth as a whole may average out to be the same as the previous year,” he added.

Both the World Bank and International Monetary Fund have predicted the world economy to contract by 0.5 to 1.7 per cent for the first time in 60 years. India’s growth, according to the two global institutions, is also expected to fall below the 5 per cent mark.

Virmani, however, did not give up the sector-wise break-up of growth except to say that agricultural output, which has nearly 18 per cent weight in GDP, would post a normal growth rate of 2.5-3 per cent.

The government, along with the RBI, had implemented series of measures aimed at boosting economic demand. In particular, excise duty on most products has been reduced by 6 percentage points. The central bank too has reduced repo rates — the rate at which it lends to commercial banks — by 4.25 percentage points since September 2008. These measures are expected to cushion the impact of economic slowdown at a time when private investment, which drove economic growth, has slumped because of uncertainty.





Read Business news in



Advertisements

Download the E-book on the Future of Business Intelligence

Learn Best practices for improving customer satisfaction

Get Cisco WebEx’s Marketing Tips, FREE! Register!

Know your customers better.. download the free e-book on CRM

Are you a mid-sized fast growing company that needs solutions

kacchi ghani mustard oil :SATYAM BRAND..(SREE GRG OIL MILL, SRIGANGANAGAR(RAJ))

No comments: