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India’s GDP Growth to Remain Strong at 7.6 Percent: World Bank 

The World Bank report attributed the robust GDP growth to exports and recovery of private investment.

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India's GDP growth will remain strong at 7.6 percent in 2016 and 7.7 percent in 2017, the World Bank said, attributing it to increasingly positive contributions from exports and a recovery of private investment in the medium term.

However, the global lender said India faces some challenge to growth. These include accelerating the responsiveness of poverty reduction, promoting inclusion, and extending gains to a broader range of human development outcomes related to health, nutrition, education and gender.

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In India, GDP growth will remain strong at 7.6 percent in 2016 and 7.7 percent in 2017, supported by expectations of a rebound in agriculture, civil service pay reforms supporting consumption, increasingly positive contributions from exports and a recovery of private investment in the medium term.
World Bank Report 

According to the report, South Asia remains a global growth hotspot and has proven resilient to external headwinds such as China's slowdown, uncertainty around stimulus policy in advanced economies, and slowing remittances.

The main challenges remain domestic and include policy uncertainty as well as fiscal and financial vulnerabilities.

In Pakistan, economic activity is projected to gradually accelerate over the medium term reaching 5 percent in 2017 and 5.4 percent in 2018, building upon 4.7 percent GDP growth at factor cost in 2016 (5.7 percent at market prices).

Growth in Bangladesh has remained robust despite internal and external headwinds, it said. Growth will be sustained at 6.8 per cent in 2017, coming slightly down from 7.1 per cent in 2016, the report added.

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On India, the report said economic growth remained robust, which, as in the past, is expected to support continued poverty reduction.

The report also said:

This year is expected to see some convergence in rural and urban economies, supported by stimulating policies, such as passage of GST and civil pay revisions, along with good monsoons... Optimism on the growth front needs to be balanced with caution when translating to broad-based poverty reduction. Despite the recent success in poverty reduction, gains have been uneven, with greater progress in states and social groups that were already better-off.

Re-balancing of growth drivers will in turn support the sustainability and inclusiveness of GDP and household income growth going forward, it said.

(With inputs from PTI.)

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Topics:  Economy    Bangladesh   China  

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