A British brokerage on Tuesday cut India’s FY22 GDP growth estimate by a sharp 0.80 percent to 9.2 percent, saying the economic impact of the second wave of infections has been deeper than initially expected. Barclays chief India economist Rahul Bajoria also mentioned the slow pace of vaccinations in the country and the rolling lockdowns across many states for the estimate.
It can be noted that the last month has seen a slew of similar forecasts from analysts, even as the RBI maintained its estimate of a 10.5 percent growth in real GDP. The analysts’ estimates range from 8.5 percent to a little above 10 percent. The higher growth number has been made possible by a low base of FY21, where the economy contracted by over 7.5 percent.
”Although India’s second COVID-19 wave has started to recede, the related economic costs have been larger owing to the more stringent lockdowns implemented to contain the outbreak we lower our FY 2021-22 GDP growth forecast a further 0.80 percent, to 9.2 percent,” Bajoria said.
He said the overall situation is coming under control even though parts of the country are still experiencing an increase in new cases and this can result in a gradual reopening of the economy. It can be noted that the second wave had witnessed new infections top 4 lakh a day with over 4,500 deaths. While the new infections have gone down, the daily deaths even the reported ones continue to be high.
Barclays said the economic costs of the recent surge in cases are rising rapidly, and added that while ”reasonably stable”, the economy experienced a sharp decline in activity in May as is evident in high-frequency data. ”While we continue to believe the lockdowns will last only until the end of June 2021, in our new base case, we now estimate economic losses of USD 74 billion, all of it contained in Q2 21 (April-June),” the note said.
Also Read
India’s vaccination programme has slowed significantly, given persistent supply constraints and logistical challenges, the British brokerage said, adding the situation will only improve in the September quarter. ”The slow vaccination drive may pose medium-term risks to growth, especially if the country experiences the third wave of COVID-19 cases,” the brokerage warned.
In what it termed as a ”pessimist scenario” of the third wave of COVID-19 infections which result in another eight weeks of lockdowns, it said the economic costs will rise and the GDP growth will slip further to 7.7 percent.
Check out our in-depth Market Coverage, Business News & get real-time Stock Market Updates on CNBC-TV18. Also, Watch our channels CNBC-TV18, CNBC Awaaz and CNBC Bajar Live on-the-go!
In Ayodhya, voters talk of a promise fulfilled and yearning for development
May 17, 2024 2:10 PM
Fight of heavyweights in Sambalpur where farmers, weavers hold the key
May 17, 2024 12:25 PM
Odisha: Fight of heavyweights in Sambalpur where farmers, weavers hold the key
May 17, 2024 10:22 AM
Lok Sabha Election 2024: What rural Delhi wants
May 16, 2024 10:10 PM