India is still the fastest growing economy
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thats because china slowed down ...not because india did anything special.....:biggthumpup:
you are not china, tell us about yourself
how good are you doing?
Growth has slowed QoQ but it has improved YoY from 6.7 percent registered in the first quarter of the last fiscal.
>> Healthier government finances - Improved tax collections, led by indirect tax growth of 37.6% during April-July; lower subsidy bill due to falling oil prices; expected savings may be around Rs 1 lakh crore.
>> Improving industrial output - Up 3.8% in June compared to 2.5% in May.
>> Inflation - both retail and wholesale - under control - Retail inflation estimated at 3.8% in July; wholesale inflation at -4.1%, the ninth straight month of contraction.
>> Lower trade deficit - Due to a fall in import bill for crude petroleum, gold.
>> Current account deficit - Appears more manageable at 1.3% GDP in 2014-15 compared to 1.7% in 2013-14.
>> Forex reserves - At a record all time high of $355 billion.
>> Foreign Institutional Investment (FII) & Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) - FII inflows surged a record 717 per cent to $40.92 billion in 2014-15 and FDI inflows jumped 48 per cent since Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the ‘Make In India’ initiative in September 2014. In fact India for the first time in the last 10 years entered the Top 10 FDI destinations in the World at #9 (From #13 last Year) and ranked #1 Baseline Profitability Index at the same time.
“In our close to 70 years’ history, we’ve never had a government that fudged statistics to the extent of this one,” says Hafeez Pasha, an economist and former finance minister. Actual growth, he says, is more like 3.5 per cent than the official 4.2 per cent, while the budget deficit is closer to 8.5 per cent than 5 per cent.
http://tribune.com.pk/story/946260/...g-govts-numbers-on-last-years-fiscal-deficit/
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/67422228-4594-11e5-af2f-4d6e0e5eda22.html#axzz3kSX9Otpz
India Economists’ Embarrassing Confession: They Don’t Know What GDP Is
- By
- ANANT VIJAY KALA
- CONNECT
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India’s radically revised gross domestic product data have apparently left economists dazed and confused because they are uncharacteristically silent about what growth was last quarter.
India is scheduled to announce GDP figures for the quarter ended Dec. 31 on Monday but instead of the regular rush of forecasts, economists seem to have created a cartel of silence, choosing not to make predictions using India’s new methodology.
Last week India surprised all the experts by recalculating GDP growth for the fiscal year ended March. Using a new calculation method, India’s economy expanded 6.9% that year, well above the 4.7% growth the country had announced earlier.
“The revision was massive,” said Siddhartha Sanyal, India economist at Barclays. “We don’t know what the GDP was in the previous quarter, so how do we estimate what is going to happen?”
The change happened because the government brought forward the base year used in GDP calculations by seven years to fiscal 2012. It also switched from using production costs to market prices.
While the headline growth figure shot up with the new calculations, the absolute GDP figure was basically the same as it was before, making it hard for economists to figure out exactly where the new-found growth came from. Meanwhile, the government didn’t give the revised quarterly data or new calculations for this year.
“We are completely blind at the moment,” said Saugata Bhattacharya, chief economist at Axis Bank.
While the new numbers suggest that last year the economy was rebounding strongly, some economists are still skeptical. Most other indicators that year suggested growth was sputtering, they said.
“I am not convinced that there is (such) good news,” said Glenn Levine, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. “If it’s true that the economy is growing close to 7%, then that suggests there isn’t much slack in the economy.”
That’s something economists are finding hard to digest given other indicators such as industrial production have pointed to weakness.
With a lot of questions about the new data still remaining unanswered, economists are only estimating growth for last quarter based on the old method even though the government won’t be announcing those numbers anymore.
Forecasts of eight economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal using the now-outdated method range between 5.0% and 5.5%, compared with the 5.3% expansion in the September quarter.
While few will venture a guess on what numbers will be announced Monday, “the broader picture is that the economy is improving,” said Axis Bank’s Mr. Bhattacharya.
http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/...assing-confession-they-dont-know-what-gdp-is/
always coming up with random data to prove your point
give something the likes of IMF like I posted
once you guys understand what a GDP is then i will [hilar][hilar][hilar]
even your own countrymen are not buying your data
dil ko behlane ko ghalib ye khayal acha hai
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