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http://m.economictimes.com/news/eco...wth-rate-hsbc-report/articleshow/52696242.cms
India needs to boost investment to reach China's growth rate: HSBC report
By ET Bureau | 11 Jun, 2016, 01:04 hrs IST
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India may struggle to achieve the kind of growth that China attained during its boom years, but that doesn’t mean investors can ignore India, said an HSBC report.
KOLKATA: India may struggle to achieve the kind of growth that China attained during its boom years, but that doesn't mean investors can ignore India, said an HSBC report, adding that given that demography is in India's favour, it will account for the same world share as China did in 2005.
India's economy grew at a stronger-than-expected 7.9% in the March quarter, making it the fastest growing major economy. But India's investment has always been lower than that of China's, putting barriers to double digit growth.
HSBC said that India will have to boost its investment rate by 10% or so of gross domestic product (GDP) to achieve China's growth rate seen in the past decade. "A tall order, though mind you, not impossible," HSBC economist Frederic Neumann said in the report, adding that it looks tough for India to pick up steam and match China's boom-time growth rates in the coming years.
He ranks India as the obvious candidate for pushing global growth since the West is not bouncing back to its lost glory anytime soon. "After all, it's the only other country with over a billion people and its economy, according to official data, has increased a tad faster than China's of late," the economist asserted.
However, India's economy isn't currently large enough to make up for China's slowdown. India is expected to equal China's 4.9% share of world GDP, achieved in 2005, by the middle of next decade, and if the country grows faster, the date can be advanced. For instance, if India continues to grow at around 7%, it would have the same global punch as China did about a decade ago only in 2029. Faster growth, of course, would bring the date forward.
"Still, don't count the country out just yet: assuming things keep ticking as long as they have, by the middle of the next decade, India's economy will account for the same world share as China did in 2005, the year when the mainland really started to make itself felt globally," he said.
India needs to boost investment to reach China's growth rate: HSBC report
By ET Bureau | 11 Jun, 2016, 01:04 hrs IST
gplus
message
aPlus
India may struggle to achieve the kind of growth that China attained during its boom years, but that doesn’t mean investors can ignore India, said an HSBC report.
KOLKATA: India may struggle to achieve the kind of growth that China attained during its boom years, but that doesn't mean investors can ignore India, said an HSBC report, adding that given that demography is in India's favour, it will account for the same world share as China did in 2005.
India's economy grew at a stronger-than-expected 7.9% in the March quarter, making it the fastest growing major economy. But India's investment has always been lower than that of China's, putting barriers to double digit growth.
HSBC said that India will have to boost its investment rate by 10% or so of gross domestic product (GDP) to achieve China's growth rate seen in the past decade. "A tall order, though mind you, not impossible," HSBC economist Frederic Neumann said in the report, adding that it looks tough for India to pick up steam and match China's boom-time growth rates in the coming years.
He ranks India as the obvious candidate for pushing global growth since the West is not bouncing back to its lost glory anytime soon. "After all, it's the only other country with over a billion people and its economy, according to official data, has increased a tad faster than China's of late," the economist asserted.
However, India's economy isn't currently large enough to make up for China's slowdown. India is expected to equal China's 4.9% share of world GDP, achieved in 2005, by the middle of next decade, and if the country grows faster, the date can be advanced. For instance, if India continues to grow at around 7%, it would have the same global punch as China did about a decade ago only in 2029. Faster growth, of course, would bring the date forward.
"Still, don't count the country out just yet: assuming things keep ticking as long as they have, by the middle of the next decade, India's economy will account for the same world share as China did in 2005, the year when the mainland really started to make itself felt globally," he said.