India's
fourth quarter GDP grows at 5.3%, below expected 6.1%
India's
annual GDP growth slumped in the January-March quarter to a nine-year
low of 5.3 per cent as the manufacturing sector shrank and a fall in
the rupee to a record low suggests the economy remains under pressure
in the current quarter
NDTV,
31
May, 2012
Thursday's
figures mark a dramatic slide in fortunes for a country that was
growing in the years before the global financial crisis at more than
9 per cent, with ambitions to challenge China as the world's top
emerging economy.
"This
is definitely a very important signal for the government—this is a
make or break situation for India and the government has to step on
the panic button," said Rupa Rege Nitsure, chief economist at
Bank of Baroda in Mumbai. "If the government doesn't step in
now, India's sovereign ratings may be jeopardised."
The
5.3 per cent growth rate was much lower than expected and was even
below the lowest forecast in a Reuters poll that had produced a
median of 6.1 per cent from predictions ranging between 5.5 per cent
and 7.3 per cent.
Quarterly
expansion was last lower in the January-March quarter of 2003 at 3.6
per cent, Thomson Reuters data showed.
The
data showed that the manufacturing sector shrank 0.3 per cent in the
quarter compared with a year earlier. The farm sector grew just 1.7
per cent.
Gross
domestic product rose 6.5 per cent in the fiscal year to the end of
March 2012, the lowest growth rate since 4.0 per cent in 2002-03 and
a sharp slowdown from the previous year's 8.4 per cent.
"The
data highlights the unusual degree of weakening of the country's
economy, likely driven by poor investment and widening trade gap,"
said Dariusz Kowalczyk, an economist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong
Kong. "The data also poses a dilemma for policymakers, as they
have no fiscal room to stimulate growth, while monetary easing scope
is very narrow, at least for now, due to rebounding and high
inflation."
The
yield on the benchmark 10-year government bonds was down 13 basis
points on Thursday.
The
BSE Sensex extended its declines after the data to 1.3 per cent on
the day.
Anubhuti
Sahay, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Mumbai, said the
data was "shocking".
"A
rate cut is a given now," Sahay said.
Standard
& Poor's cut India's credit rating outlook in April to negative
from stable, worried by India's fiscal and current account deficits.
The decision jeopardises India's long-term rating of BBB minus, the
lowest investment grade rating.
The
impact of the euro zone debt crisis, a lack of economic reforms and
high interest rates dragged on India's growth throughout last year.
Before
Thursday's data, private economists had cut forecasts for Asia's
third-largest economy to between 6 per cent and 6.5 per cent for the
fiscal year to March 2013. The government forecasts close to 7.5 per
cent.
Rupee
slump
The
rupee fell on Thursday to a record low beyond 56.50 per dollar. Its
slide of 14 per cent from its 2012 high adds to inflation concerns in
the country and raises its import bill, putting pressure on the trade
and current accounts.
That
leaves policymakers in a bind. The government ran a fiscal deficit in
the year to March 2012 of 5.9 per cent of GDP so has little room to
stimulate the economy.
The
RBI will be wary that reducing rates could fuel inflation, which is
already uncomfortably above 7 per cent. The government is trying to
push through the biggest increase in petrol prices on record to
reduce its subsidy bill, sparking popular anger and plans for
nationwide strikes.
"The
Reserve Bank of India has already adopted a pro-growth policy. But
inflation is not softening, so it cannot do a significant rate cut.
We think they will focus more on making liquidity surplus," said
Sujan Hajra, chief economist at Anand Rathi Securities in Mumbai.
There
is little evidence that economic conditions have picked up in the
April-June quarter.
The
HSBC purchasing managers' index suggested the factory sector picked
up in April, but the output index fell for a third straight month.
Car
sales in April rose just 3.4 per cent from a year earlier, the
weakest pace since October, when they dropped 24 per cent.
Domestic
demand and corporate investment have been hit hard by 13 central bank
rate hikes between mid-2010 and last October.
The
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut rates by 50 basis points last month,
but warned it saw limited scope for further cuts partly because
inflation remained high.
"The
RBI is fighting a multi-faceted battle - managing the currency,
supporting growth, fighting inflation. I think they will wait for
fiscal consolidation before cutting rates further," said Rahul
Bajoria, regional economist at Barclays in Singapore.
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