India beats China in growth sweepstakes
New Delhi: Its official! Indias growth in 2010 was a notch higher than that of China. According to data from the IMF, Indias GDP grew 10.4% in 2010 versus Chinas 10.3%.
And if projections by official agencies are anything to go by, China is looking at a 7% growth in the Twelfth Plan period (2011-15) compared with Indias 9%.
This is the first time that Indias growth has overtaken that of China, since the latter initiated reforms in the 1980s, a decade ahead of India.
The other fast-growing major developing economies in 2010 included Brazil (7.5%), Mexico (5.5%) and Russia (4%). Among developed countries the fastest growing major economies in 2010 were Japan (3.9%), Germany (3.5%), Canada (3.1%) and United States (2.8%). Growth was much slower in countries like France (1.5%) and Italy (1.3%).
At 10.4%, the growth numbers for India are higher than the official data. The reason for this is provided in the method used by the IMF to arrive at its numbers. The IMF estimates growth rates by converting the GDP of countries in local currencies to $ at market exchange. So, if a currency appreciates, this raises its GDP growth in $ terms, and the country whose currency appreciates more will grow faster in $ terms.
If Indias GDP was R100 and the exchange rate 48.85, this means Indias $ GDP is 2.05. If, however, the exchange rate appreciates to 45.93, the same GDP will rise to 2.18. While Indias currency appreciated 6.4% in 2010, from R48.85 per $ in 2009 to R45.93 in 2010, Chinas currency appreciated only 0.9%, from 6.84 per $ in 2009 to 6.77 in 2010. So Indias GDP got a push that was higher than Chinas.
Whether this will continue in the years to come will depend on a combination of factors. First is the actual growth in each country in its local currency if the planning agencies in both countries turn out to be correct, India will grow faster than China. The $ growth rates, however, will depend upon what happens to currency movements against the $. If the yuan appreciates against the $ as most expect, while the rupee appreciates less, this will make Chinas $ growth look higher and Indias $ growth look lower.
India beats China in growth sweepstakes
New Delhi: Its official! Indias growth in 2010 was a notch higher than that of China. According to data from the IMF, Indias GDP grew 10.4% in 2010 versus Chinas 10.3%.
And if projections by official agencies are anything to go by, China is looking at a 7% growth in the Twelfth Plan period (2011-15) compared with Indias 9%.
This is the first time that Indias growth has overtaken that of China, since the latter initiated reforms in the 1980s, a decade ahead of India.
The other fast-growing major developing economies in 2010 included Brazil (7.5%), Mexico (5.5%) and Russia (4%). Among developed countries the fastest growing major economies in 2010 were Japan (3.9%), Germany (3.5%), Canada (3.1%) and United States (2.8%). Growth was much slower in countries like France (1.5%) and Italy (1.3%).
At 10.4%, the growth numbers for India are higher than the official data. The reason for this is provided in the method used by the IMF to arrive at its numbers. The IMF estimates growth rates by converting the GDP of countries in local currencies to $ at market exchange. So, if a currency appreciates, this raises its GDP growth in $ terms, and the country whose currency appreciates more will grow faster in $ terms.
If Indias GDP was R100 and the exchange rate 48.85, this means Indias $ GDP is 2.05. If, however, the exchange rate appreciates to 45.93, the same GDP will rise to 2.18. While Indias currency appreciated 6.4% in 2010, from R48.85 per $ in 2009 to R45.93 in 2010, Chinas currency appreciated only 0.9%, from 6.84 per $ in 2009 to 6.77 in 2010. So Indias GDP got a push that was higher than Chinas.
Whether this will continue in the years to come will depend on a combination of factors. First is the actual growth in each country in its local currency if the planning agencies in both countries turn out to be correct, India will grow faster than China. The $ growth rates, however, will depend upon what happens to currency movements against the $. If the yuan appreciates against the $ as most expect, while the rupee appreciates less, this will make Chinas $ growth look higher and Indias $ growth look lower.
India beats China in growth sweepstakes