At 7 percent, growth in the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) has confounded economists and commentators. Most expected that activity will slow considerably between the second and third quarters of the year to reflect the impact of a shortage in currency induced by demonetisation.
The Bloomberg consensus estimate had pegged growth at 6.1 percent and few (if any) had forecast growth in the 7 percent range. No surprise then that economists are now looking for factors that explain this surprisingly positive number. Explanations differ widely with some pointing to a base effect due to the downward revision in growth for previous quarters, while others are attributing the stronger than expected growth to agriculture and higher government spending.
In his report, Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economist at State Bank of India highlighted revisions to GDP growth data for previous quarters.
GDP growth for the first and second quarters of FY16 have been revised higher. But growth for the third quarter of FY16 was revised lower. This would have had some impact on the headline number for the third quarter of FY17, Ghosh wrote in his report.
Sonal Varma of Nomura also thinks that the downward revision in growth for comparable quarter of last year impacted the numbers. But she throws in a few other possible explanations.
Nomura believe there could be three reasons for the upside surprise:
The inability to capture informal sector data is being cited by one than one economist to explain why demonetisation has had a minimal impact on growth data.
Just like Varma of Nomura, Pranjul Bhandari at HSBC also thinks that could be one reason why GDP growth surprised to the upside.
Samiran Chakraborty shares that view.
The growth in the unorganised sector (which represents 21.5 percent of the manufacturing sector) is estimated using proxy indicators like IIP (Index of Industrial Production) and may undergo significant downward revision, wrote Chakraborty. “Yet as the supply of currency improves (over 60 percent of demonetised currency is already back in the system), we expect the demand situation to normalise and the disruptions in rural/SME supply chains to be repaired,” he added in his analysis of the GDP data.
Some economists are also citing the strong growth in agriculture and government spending, both of which supported growth during the quarter.
Government services and agriculture saw “extremely robust” growth at 12 percent and 6 percent YoY, respectively, wrote Kapil Gupta at Edelweiss Financial Services. Excluding these, private sector real activity did slowdown led by the financial services and real estate segment along with construction activity.
Shubhada Rao, chief economist at Yes Bank also highlighted this:
(This article was originally published on BloombergQuint)
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