India no longer the world’s fastest growing economy : Ache din agaye hain h1b kay baad !:)

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
India no longer the world’s fastest growing economy
nationalherald%2F2017-06%2Fcb16b7e1-94d3-4cc8-b97c-0895daaf9b96%2FArun%20Jaitley%20%281%29.jpg


PTI Photo by Subhav ShuklaUnion Minister for Finance, Defence and Corporate Affairs, Arun Jaitley addresses the media on the achievements of NDA Government in New Delhi

Arun Jaitley did not seem perturbed about the growth rate taking a plunge with India giving up the world’s fastest growing economy tag back to China, that grew 6.9% during the

same quarter


Anil K AntonyJun 01st 2017, 06.32 PM SHARE
Indian economic growth in the fourth quarter of 2016-17 (January-March) coming down to 6.1% from the 7% in the previous quarter, according to the data released by the Central Statistical Office (CSO) indicates that the demonetisation decision has indeed adversely affected our economy.

Almost all the key growth drivers, from agriculture, manufacturing and mining sectors to construction and private investment have seen significant drops.
Not many were surprised when noted economists from Amartya Sen to Raghuram Rajan and Larry Summers to Paul Krugman frowned at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shock decision on November 8 last year, to demonetise the 1,000 and 500 rupee notes, taking out almost 86%, in value terms of the Indian currency in circulation. Noted development economist Jean Dreze had then warned, “Demonetisation in a booming economy is like shooting at the tyres of a racing car.”Eminent economists in the Opposition ranks, like former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former Finance Minister P Chidambaram had also warned about the poorly planned and executed decision causing a possible decline in the country’s GDP, with even a 1% fall leading to a loss of ₹1.5 lakh crore along with the loss of countless number of jobs.

Despite the warnings and the criticism, the Prime Minister and the Finance minister repeatedly asserted that the note ban would cause no harmful impact on our economy, claims that are suddenly very hard to back up, with our growth dropping to a two-year low, and with India giving up the world’s fastest growing economy tag back to China, that grew 6.9% during the same quarter.One also should keep in mind that the current administration soon after taking charge had changed the base year for calculating national accounts to 2011-12 from 2004-05, in addition to the routine annual revision – an alteration exercise that had caused a significant revision of 4.7% GDP growth in 2013-14 to a relatively high 6.9%, making the current figure pale in comparison to any of the 10 years of the previous UPA governments.The fourth quarter also witnessed a significant increase in government spending, of almost 17%, in the defence and public administration sectors, without which the growth numbers would look even more unimpressive.

We are yet to see a proper appraisal of the effects the demonetisation exercise had on jobs, even though bodies like the All India Manufacturers’ Organisation (AIMO) had predicted mass job losses, especially for micro and small-scale industries.
The government, which very recently completed three years—on May 26, is facing the dual challenges of falling growth numbers and increasing unemployment rates. While almost 1.5 crore people enter our job market annually, employment generation in the eight labor-intensive sectors, according to our Labour Bureau, was a meagre 1,35,000 in 2015.The order on ‘cattle’ slaughter, just a few days before the release of the new economic data, hardly seems surprising, considering that nationalist, cultural and religious rhetoric have been time-tested means of under-performing governments across the globe to divert attention of the masses away from pressing and pertinent economic issues.

Anil is a Technology Evangelist, Venture Architect and a Social Entrepreneur Tweets @anilkantonyhttps://www.nationalheraldindia.com/economy/2017/06/01/india-no-longer-the-worlds-fastest-growing-economy-china-arun-jaitley
 
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nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
woh kaha hain ache din ki baat kernay walay ? ..trump pay puja paat kerwanay walay ? ..nazer nahi arahay ? ...yeh ulti ***** kesay beh rahi hai ??
 

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Even the 6.1% figure is an inaccurate number :

[h=1]Is India’s GDP Growth for Real or the Result of Fudged Data?[/h]
Sohel Sarkar
June 9, 2016, 8:56 am



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A lot has been said about India’s new method of GDP computing – introduced by India’s Chief Statistician TCS Anant. Those who dispute this method, call it a ‘statistical illusion’. They point out that unless something has changed dramatically in recent years in how companies and consumers behave, the economy is more likely to be expanding at 5 percent, not the 7.6 percent claimed by the government in the Jan-March quarter.
Abheek Burman, the consulting editor of The Economic Times belongs to this camp. Burman argues that far from being an improvement in the GDP calculation method, the new approach is “a crazy statistical fudge, a delight for emperors in need of clothes”. Why? He argues that there has been a decline in several indicators but an unexplained rise in some. His claim however, has been rubbished by member of NITI Aayog, Bibek Debroy, in an article in The Indian Express.
Debroy says there are consistent arguments to this GDP puzzle – explanations that suggest that the CSO has got it right.







thequint%2F2015-09%2F6facdc99-b8ba-4e52-a2a1-39e431691d31%2FGDP-1
India’s Jan-March GDP jumped to 7.6 percent, but is it an accurate reflection of how the economy is faring? (Photo: Reuters)




[h=2]On the Subject of Discrepancy[/h]


The bulk of growth has apparently materialised from Rs 140,000 crore – try wrapping your mind around that number – of ‘discrepancies’ in our balance sheets. To remind you, this number was less than Rs 30,000 crore a year ago. TCA has conjured up a more than four-fold jump in ‘discrepancies’ and padded it to the GDP number.
Abheek Burman



An impression has also been conveyed that this fourth quarter is special because of the discrepancies, but they have always existed. Discrepancies in current prices were Rs 139,540 crore in the Q4 of 2011-12 and Rs 130,419 crore in Q4 of 2012-13...it’s best to express discrepancies as percentage of GDP, since nominal figures are involved. For Q4 of 2015-16, that high current price figure converts to 4.7 percent of GDP; in quick estimates in Q4 of 2012-13, the share was 6.2 per cent and in revised estimates in Q4 of 2013-14, the share was 5.9 percent. This is hardly a case of 2015-16 being an outlier.
Bibek Debroy



Debroy also argues that the large discrepancies also stem from the fact that our “expenditure numbers are bad”. He adds that discrepancies are just a ‘residual category’.





[h=2]Has Private Consumption Grown?[/h]


Private consumption is also supposed to have grown – by an astronomical Rs 127,000 crore in one year. I do not know a single person whose consumption has recently rocketed up.
Abheek Burman



Notice that just because I have been unable to explain how some income was spent, that income doesn’t vanish into thin air...There is no dispute about those goods and services (their value) having been produced.
Bibek Debroy





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Many of India’s economic indicators are in variance with GDP data. (Photo: Reuters)




[h=2]GDP vs Other Economic Indicators[/h]


Burman quotes a range of other data to argue that the GDP number is at stark variance with other economic indicators which seem to be on a downward trajectory - particularly investment, corporate valuations, employment data and the rising bad loans in the banking sector.



The most frightening is a Rs 17,000 crore-plus drop in investment, which reflects a lack of confidence in Modi’s India.
Abheek Burman



Why has the valuation of Flipkart, the largest e-commerce firm, been knocked down several times by investors? This company cannot hire on campus because its pockets are empty. Its peers aren’t doing any better. All state-owned banks are drowning in red: Bank of India lost more than Rs 6,000 crore in a year, tiny Canara Bank is nearly Rs 4,000 crore in the red. Our largest bank, state-owned SBI, saw profits sliding 66%.






While Debroy doesn’t dispute these numbers directly, he makes two key points.
1. He says that the high level of discrepancies also arise as commentators work with current and not constant prices – data based on the former are automatically higher.



...if I am going to spin a tale about cooked up figures, I should use the current price numbers. Apart from everything else, current price figures are higher than constant (2011-12 prices) ones.
Bibek Debroy



2. He also says that once we have full year numbers, we shouldn’t bother about quarterly GDP numbers because they are not robust. Debroy claims that the quarterly numbers are relied on only for the purpose of optics.




 

GAYUR

Banned
woh kaha hain ache din ki baat kernay walay ? ..trump pay puja paat kerwanay walay ? ..nazer nahi arahay ? ...yeh ulti ***** kesay beh rahi hai ??


trump ne to teri tashrif .....par laat maar di saudi arab me ...........[hilar][hilar][hilar]

saudi me teri tashrif ke sath accidents kyon hote hai ? .................[hilar][hilar][hilar][hilar]

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