Indian Economy To Grow In Range Of 6.5-6.8%
India GDP to grow at a 4-year low pace of 6.4% in current fiscal: NSO
Indian Economy To Grow In Range Of 6.5-6.8%
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New Delhi: Deloitte India on Tuesday projected India’s GDP to grow at 6.5-6.8 per cent in the current fiscal and said India will have to adapt to the evolving global landscape and harness its domestic strengths to drive sustainable growth.
In its Economic Outlook report, Deloitte India also said the country needs to decouple from global uncertainties and harness its domestic potential. Despite global and domestic challenges, India is moving up the global value chains, as highlighted by the rising share of high-value manufacturing exports, particularly in electronics and machinery and equipment.
Deloitte India, in its latest Economic Outlook, has revised its annual GDP growth projection for FY2024-25 to 6.5-6.8 per cent, with expectations for 6.7-7.3 per cent in the following year. The adjustment reflects the need for cautious optimism as the economy navigates rising global trade and investment uncertainties. In its Economic Outlook report in October, Deloitte India had projected the country’s economic growth higher at 7-7.2 per cent for the current fiscal.
“India will have to adapt to the evolving global landscape and harness its domestic strengths to drive sustainable growth.
One way to do this would be through economic decoupling from global uncertainties and harnessing India’s untapped potential. Several indicators that reveal resilience in certain pockets are worth noting,” it said. As per the first advance estimates released by the National Statistics Office (NSO) earlier this month, India is expected to grow at a 4-year low pace of 6.4 per cent in the current fiscal.
The RBI expects growth to be 6.6 per cent in the current fiscal. “Election uncertainties in the first quarter followed by a modest activity in construction and manufacturing in the subsequent quarter due to weather-related disruptions led to weaker-than-expected gross fixed capital formation. The government’s capex stood at just 37.3 per cent of annual targets in the first half, a sharp decline from last year’s 49 per cent, and there is a lag in the momentum it needs to gain,” Deloitte India Economist Rumki Majumdar said.
Additionally, a tempered global growth outlook, potential shifts in trade regulations among industrial nations, and more stringent monetary policies than previously anticipated in India and the US may hinder the synchronised recovery in Western economies.