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Updated 11 Feb, 2015 08:07am

Trick or treat? India’s strong GDP figures mask economic reality

NEW DELHI: For Indian business, the government and the central bank, data revisions that have transformed the country’s $2.1 trillion economy into one of the world’s fastest growing are too good to be true.

Now, the search is on for reliable indicators of underlying activity, vital for Finance Minister Arun Jaitley as he draws up his annual budget and for Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan as he weighs whether to cut interest rates again.

“Let’s not get carried away — the ground reality is very different,” one senior finance ministry official told Reuters after figures on Monday showed that India’s economy outgrew China’s in the three months to December.

Based on a new calculation method, the statistics department said the Indian economy grew 7.5 per cent year-on-year in the last quarter and is on track to expand 7.4pc in the year through March 31.

It was quite a turnaround for Asia’s third-largest economy, which based on the old calculations was struggling to recover from the longest spell of sub-par growth in a generation.

Yet far from vindicating Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s stewardship of the economy, the revised growth numbers are at odds with evidence on the ground.

Stalled projects and stretched capacity in the power, infrastructure and housing sectors are having knock-on effects down the supply chain to small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), said Anil Bhardwaj, secretary general of the Federation of Indian Micro and Small and Medium Enterprises.

“This is a bit perplexing. The feedback we are getting on the ground is not as positive. SMEs are not getting the orders,” Bhardwaj told Reuters.

“There is an improvement in business sentiment, in the environment, but unfortunately there is no movement on the ground.”

Larsen and Toubro, an industrial group regarded as a bellwether for the wider economy, lowered its order book estimates on Monday and said a recovery in its domestic business was at least a year away.

“India Inc, while it continues to be aspiring, is still on the wait and watch mode,” Chief Financial Officer R. Shankar Raman told reporters.

Published in Dawn February 11th , 2015

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