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UN puts India’s GDP growth at 7.7% for 2016-17

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United Nations: India is projected to grow by 7.7% in fiscal 2017, remaining the fastest growing large developing economy, as it benefits from strong private consumption and gradual introduction of significant domestic reforms, a United Nations report said.

The United Nations World Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) 2017 report launched on Tuesday said India’s economy is projected to grow by 7.7% in fiscal year 2017 and 7.6% in 2018, benefiting from strong private consumption. It however cautioned that low capacity utilisation and stressed balance sheets of banks and businesses will prevent a strong investment revival in the short term.

China’s growth on the other hand is projected to remain stable at 6.5% for fiscal years 2017 and 2018, supported by favourable domestic demand and accommodative fiscal measures, including off-budget fiscal support through policy banks and public-private partnerships. However the implications of China’s ongoing economic rebalancing will inevitably be felt by the region in the medium and long-run through trade (including commodity prices) and financial channels, albeit to a varied extent across countries, the report added.

Also Read: IMF cuts India’s GDP growth forecast to 6.6% on note ban woes

The report, UN’s flagship publication on expected trends in the global economy, comes just a day after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) cut India’s growth rate for the current fiscal year to 6.6% from its previous estimate of 7.6% due to the “temporary negative consumption shock” of demonetisation. The World Bank too decelerated India’s GDP growth for 2016-17 fiscal to 7% from its previous estimate of 7.6% citing the impact of demonetisation.

The UN report does not make any mention of the withdrawal of the high-denomination Rs500 and Rs1,000 currency notes by the Indian government nor its impact on the country’s economic growth.

The report said India has positioned itself as the most dynamic emerging economy among the largest countries and is expected to remain the fastest growing on the back of robust private consumption and significant domestic reforms gradually being implemented by the government. It estimated that in the 2016 fiscal, India grew by 7.6%.

In India, “investment demand is expected to slightly pick up, helped by monetary easing, government efforts towards infrastructure investments and public-private partnerships, and the implementation of domestic reforms such as the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) bill,” the report said. It added that the GST reform constitutes a “major change” by establishing a new uniform tax rate. The reform should promote investment in the medium term through lower transaction and logistic costs and efficiency gains. Its effective implementation requires adequate capacity building of the tax administration.

The report added that in India, in spite of a strong emphasis on rural areas and infrastructure investments on the expenditure side, fiscal policy has largely followed a cautious approach and the budget deficit is expected to further decline gradually.

For 2016/17, the deficit is projected to reach 3.5% of GDP and is on track to meet the medium-term target of 3.0% of GDP. On inflation, the report forecast consumer price inflation for India at 5.7 in 2017, declining slightly to 5.4 in 2018.

The report said the world economy expanded by just 2.2% in 2016, the slowest rate of growth since the Great Recession of 2009. World gross product is projected to grow by 2.7% in 2017 and 2.9% in 2018, a slight downward revision from the forecasts made last May. Although a modest global recovery is projected for 2017-18, the world economy has not yet emerged from the period of slow growth, characterised by weak investment, dwindling trade and flagging productivity growth, the report added.

Launching the report in UN, assistant secretary-general for economic development, United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Lenni Montiel underscored the “need to redouble the efforts to bring the global economy back on a stronger and more inclusive growth path and create an international economic environment that is conducive to sustainable development”.

It added that global oil demand continued to grow in 2016 but the pace of growth was slower than in 2015 as the positive boost from low oil prices to consumption growth waned.

“Oil demand was driven mainly by robust consumption in the large emerging economies, particularly China and India,” the report said adding oil demand is expected to continue strengthening in line with the projected improvement in global growth.

Growth in oil demand will remain supported mainly by the United States and the large emerging economies, particularly China and India. Growth in developing economies slowed to a meagre 3.6% in 2016, the slowest pace of expansion since the global financial crisis, mainly due to lower commodity prices, weak global trade and persistent uncertainties in the world economy.

Going forward, average growth in developing economies is expected to pick up to 4.4% in 2017 and 4.7% in 2018 on the back of a moderate recovery in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean and Western Asia.

The report noted that fragilities in the banking sector and stressed balanced sheets of corporates remain important challenges for some economies. It cited the Indian government’s commitment to a $3.7 billion package to recapitalise state-owned banks, saying various regulations have been introduced in order to reduce banks’ financial exposures and to encourage private participation in the banking sector.

“Although countries should try to avoid a sudden tightening of monetary and liquidity conditions in the outlook period, policy measures will critically depend on the evolution of external factors, such as oil prices,” it said. PTI


http://www.livemint.com/Politics/GSoBBQb7wlMgo8GG8JQlEL/UN-puts-Indian-GDP-growth-at-77-for-FY17.htm



@Two @ito @foxtrot1 @XiNiX
 
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With liquidity back in January, I think the negative effect of demonetization will be short lived. The positive effects of demonetization will long term.

IMF has their own reason for lowering the GDP forecasts, but IMF forecasts have gone many times wrong and IMF is know to correct their forecasts regularly.
 
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United Nations: India is projected to grow by 7.7% in fiscal 2017, remaining the fastest growing large developing economy, as it benefits from strong private consumption and gradual introduction of significant domestic reforms, a United Nations report said.

The United Nations World Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) 2017 report launched on Tuesday said India’s economy is projected to grow by 7.7% in fiscal year 2017 and 7.6% in 2018, benefiting from strong private consumption. It however cautioned that low capacity utilisation and stressed balance sheets of banks and businesses will prevent a strong investment revival in the short term.

China’s growth on the other hand is projected to remain stable at 6.5% for fiscal years 2017 and 2018, supported by favourable domestic demand and accommodative fiscal measures, including off-budget fiscal support through policy banks and public-private partnerships. However the implications of China’s ongoing economic rebalancing will inevitably be felt by the region in the medium and long-run through trade (including commodity prices) and financial channels, albeit to a varied extent across countries, the report added.

Also Read: IMF cuts India’s GDP growth forecast to 6.6% on note ban woes

The report, UN’s flagship publication on expected trends in the global economy, comes just a day after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) cut India’s growth rate for the current fiscal year to 6.6% from its previous estimate of 7.6% due to the “temporary negative consumption shock” of demonetisation. The World Bank too decelerated India’s GDP growth for 2016-17 fiscal to 7% from its previous estimate of 7.6% citing the impact of demonetisation.

The UN report does not make any mention of the withdrawal of the high-denomination Rs500 and Rs1,000 currency notes by the Indian government nor its impact on the country’s economic growth.

The report said India has positioned itself as the most dynamic emerging economy among the largest countries and is expected to remain the fastest growing on the back of robust private consumption and significant domestic reforms gradually being implemented by the government. It estimated that in the 2016 fiscal, India grew by 7.6%.

In India, “investment demand is expected to slightly pick up, helped by monetary easing, government efforts towards infrastructure investments and public-private partnerships, and the implementation of domestic reforms such as the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) bill,” the report said. It added that the GST reform constitutes a “major change” by establishing a new uniform tax rate. The reform should promote investment in the medium term through lower transaction and logistic costs and efficiency gains. Its effective implementation requires adequate capacity building of the tax administration.

The report added that in India, in spite of a strong emphasis on rural areas and infrastructure investments on the expenditure side, fiscal policy has largely followed a cautious approach and the budget deficit is expected to further decline gradually.

For 2016/17, the deficit is projected to reach 3.5% of GDP and is on track to meet the medium-term target of 3.0% of GDP. On inflation, the report forecast consumer price inflation for India at 5.7 in 2017, declining slightly to 5.4 in 2018.

The report said the world economy expanded by just 2.2% in 2016, the slowest rate of growth since the Great Recession of 2009. World gross product is projected to grow by 2.7% in 2017 and 2.9% in 2018, a slight downward revision from the forecasts made last May. Although a modest global recovery is projected for 2017-18, the world economy has not yet emerged from the period of slow growth, characterised by weak investment, dwindling trade and flagging productivity growth, the report added.

Launching the report in UN, assistant secretary-general for economic development, United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Lenni Montiel underscored the “need to redouble the efforts to bring the global economy back on a stronger and more inclusive growth path and create an international economic environment that is conducive to sustainable development”.

It added that global oil demand continued to grow in 2016 but the pace of growth was slower than in 2015 as the positive boost from low oil prices to consumption growth waned.

“Oil demand was driven mainly by robust consumption in the large emerging economies, particularly China and India,” the report said adding oil demand is expected to continue strengthening in line with the projected improvement in global growth.

Growth in oil demand will remain supported mainly by the United States and the large emerging economies, particularly China and India. Growth in developing economies slowed to a meagre 3.6% in 2016, the slowest pace of expansion since the global financial crisis, mainly due to lower commodity prices, weak global trade and persistent uncertainties in the world economy.

Going forward, average growth in developing economies is expected to pick up to 4.4% in 2017 and 4.7% in 2018 on the back of a moderate recovery in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean and Western Asia.

The report noted that fragilities in the banking sector and stressed balanced sheets of corporates remain important challenges for some economies. It cited the Indian government’s commitment to a $3.7 billion package to recapitalise state-owned banks, saying various regulations have been introduced in order to reduce banks’ financial exposures and to encourage private participation in the banking sector.

“Although countries should try to avoid a sudden tightening of monetary and liquidity conditions in the outlook period, policy measures will critically depend on the evolution of external factors, such as oil prices,” it said. PTI


http://www.livemint.com/Politics/GSoBBQb7wlMgo8GG8JQlEL/UN-puts-Indian-GDP-growth-at-77-for-FY17.htm



@Two @ito @foxtrot1 @XiNiX

Come on guys, don't make us laugh at you. Since when UN start talking about economic activities?
 
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UN projected it 7.7% because India is preparing for big industrial growth through make in India.
The demonetisation and digital economy is the first step to accommodate ease of banking and minimize corruption.

Once the banks and economy is ready only then the momentum and pace of rapid industrialisation will take place. otherwise we will end up talking about one project for decades.

And soon the growth rate will not restrict to one digit but go beyond it.
 
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Come on guys, don't make us laugh at you. Since when UN start talking about economic activities?

its estimations are more consistent

a8761CF.jpg


http://data.un.org/Data.aspx?d=WDI&f=Indicator_Code:NY.GDP.MKTP.KD.ZG
imf

imf.jpg
 
. . .
With liquidity back in January, I think the negative effect of demonetization will be short lived. The positive effects of demonetization will long term.

IMF has their own reason for lowering the GDP forecasts, but IMF forecasts have gone many times wrong and IMF is know to correct their forecasts regularly.

But that gave some short span of Chinese trolls to cheer.

india can grow 10 percent in year why not

Yes but still our economy is not performing as per its potential. We have developed at 10% in past.
 
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So china growth is on declining verse...ohh yea thats y they are continuosly talking of friendship , non nulcear countries ...lol wanna keep the pace of their production factories up to mark and for that they need orders :p
Because China's economy is undergoing transformation. We all know that there is always a high growth rate in the initial development of a backward economy. Because it is a big market space..

Although China and India are also developing countries. But the industrial structure of the two countries is quite different. China has the most complete industrial system in the world. India has the world's largest agricultural population and service population.

China needs most is the market, and India needs most is investment. Even if Chinese factory orders fell, China's industrial system was still... A simple example is that China remains the world's number one Shipbuilding and exporting countries, and the world's third largest arms exporter (This is what you call the decline of Chinese factory orders.). As long as China maintains a strong industry, it will never be afraid of losing the market.

This and India rely on foreign capital to stimulate economic growth model, there is a fundamental difference.
 
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Because China's economy is undergoing transformation. We all know that there is always a high growth rate in the initial development of a backward economy. Because it is a big market space..

Although China and India are also developing countries. But the industrial structure of the two countries is quite different. China has the most complete industrial system in the world. India has the world's largest agricultural population and service population.

China needs most is the market, and India needs most is investment. Even if Chinese factory orders fell, China's industrial system was still... A simple example is that China remains the world's number one Shipbuilding and exporting countries, and the world's third largest arms exporter (This is what you call the decline of Chinese factory orders.). As long as China maintains a strong industry, it will never be afraid of losing the market.

This and India rely on foreign capital to stimulate economic growth model, there is a fundamental difference.
yeah !
 
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