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India's GDP to grow 8% in FY16; hit $3 trillion mark in five years

NEW DELHI: India's growth rate is expected to accelerate to 8 per cent in the current financial year and the economy will surpass USD 3 trillion mark in less than five years, NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Arvind Panagariya said.

"I will be greatly disappointed if we do not hit the 8 per cent mark in 2015-16. I expect the economy to hit USD 3 trillion within five years or less," he told PTI in an interview.

Indian economy, which is little more than USD 2 trillion, recorded a growth rate of 7.3 per cent in 2014-15. India is presently the third largest economy in Asia after China and Japan.

On the back of ongoing reforms and stress on manufacturing sector as part of the 'Make in India' drive, the NITI Aayog chief said that India can look for much bigger share in global exports, the global economic woes notwithstanding.

The world economy is large and our share in the world exports is still below 2 per cent. So we have a huge scope for growth even in a sluggish world economy. As long as we continue on the reforms path and ensure that the rupee does not become unduly overvalued, we will be well positioned to chip away some of the 12 per cent share that China currently enjoys in the world merchandise exports.

"Wages in China have already risen enough that many manufacturers there are looking for new destinations with lower wages and India is well placed to be that destination," Panagariya said.

Read more at:
GDP to grow 8% in FY16; hit $3 trillion mark in five years: Arvind Panagariya - The Economic Times

However, according to a Dun & Bradstreet report, India is expected to clock a GDP growth of 8.4 percent in the current financial year, spurred by policy reforms, fall in food inflation and lower fuel prices. According to the research firm, the partial unclogging of domestic policy logjam, focus on public investments in infrastructure, fall in food inflation and lower fuel prices along with improving income growth is likely strengthen aggregate demand.

Cheers!



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The speed is slow but hopefully it will improve in the future


Hopefully we will achieve double digit growth within 2-3 years

According to you Riazhaq is the most reputed economist who knows Indian economy better than RBI governor himself?????

I advise you to ignore this fool
 
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For all Doubting Thomases...
NEW012015A-B.jpg

IMF Survey : Global Growth Revised Down, Despite Cheaper Oil, Faster U.S. Growth
Even IMF estimates Indian GDP to grow at 6.5% under current policy in 2016.
If government succeeds with GST and Land bills, there is a good chance, we will add atleast 1 percentage point to that value.

PS: btw that rate will make India, the fastest growing economy in the world (for Major economies).
 
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For all Doubting Thomases...
View attachment 233836
IMF Survey : Global Growth Revised Down, Despite Cheaper Oil, Faster U.S. Growth
Even IMF estimates Indian GDP to grow at 6.5% under current policy in 2016.
If government succeeds with GST and Land bills, there is a good chance, we will add atleast 1 percentage point to that value.

PS: btw that rate will make India, the fastest growing economy in the world (for Major economies).

Projections mean nothing. I want actual results.
 
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Projections mean nothing. I want actual results.
IMF projections are usually right and unless there is a drastic policy reversal or a massive global crisis (Greece could be one), they get it right most times.
 
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IMF projections are usually right and unless there is a drastic policy reversal or a massive global crisis (Greece could be one), they get it right most times.

Not really. IMF has mostly been wrong on most countries.
 
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Yes i know you know better than IMF and world bank because you are chinese.
And you chinese are:omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:,
How dare world bank publish that without china's consent,.:omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

@Horus can you check if this guy is a double account please. I have a feeling he is. An IP address check will do I think.
Thanks Horus.
 
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For all Doubting Thomases...
View attachment 233836
IMF Survey : Global Growth Revised Down, Despite Cheaper Oil, Faster U.S. Growth
Even IMF estimates Indian GDP to grow at 6.5% under current policy in 2016.
If government succeeds with GST and Land bills, there is a good chance, we will add atleast 1 percentage point to that value.

PS: btw that rate will make India, the fastest growing economy in the world (for Major economies).

3 Tr My foot.

It will be at least 5+ TR. Rupee shall appreciate with growing economy.

8% Annual growth for 5 years. i.e 47% increase to current 2.3 TR USD is 3.38 tr USD.

Rupee =atleast 40 a USD.

Si9ze of economy is =3.38/64*40=5.40 TR USD.
 
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Coulda, woulda, shoulda doesn't matter in this world. Achieve it first, then come talk.
Without India's vedic math manipulation, actual Indian growth is less than 4%.

You know IMF math, or you only know about Vedic math? But I am happy you atleast know about Vedic math.
 
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@RiazHaq has a wealth of information on the Indian economy. I go to him for clarification on the real state of the Indian economy.

A market is run on positive news , not a single businessman will say my shop is dull. I think you don't have an idea of stock market.
 
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3 Tr My foot.

It will be at least 5+ TR. Rupee shall appreciate with growing economy.

8% Annual growth for 5 years. i.e 47% increase to current 2.3 TR USD is 3.38 tr USD.

Rupee =atleast 40 a USD.

Size of economy is =3.38/64*40=5.40 TR USD.

Indian Rupee is now at 63. This weakness is due to the massive current account deficit which is causing the Rupee to devalue. Indian interest rates are very high due to the very high inflation and the big deficits which requires a higher interest rates to attract capital.

Indian Rupee hasn't devalued further because India has been using its forex reserves to prop up the Rupee by buying Rupees and selling dollars and then reporting forex reserves as 'increasing' to keep international investors happy and rating agencies happy :lol:

India is a net debtor nation which is getting worse.

Indian economy will shrink in size as its currency gets weaker as India has no manufacturing base to reverse its trade deficits.
 
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