Economy Set
to Fall Off a Cliff
GDP to contract 5% in FY21, warns
Crisil; SBI report pegs growth rate at -6.8%
Notwithstanding
the economic packages announced by the Centre so far, India is staring at a recession
in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Going by the dire prediction of GDP contraction
made by rating agency Crisil and State Bank of India’s
Economic Research Department for FY21, India’s economy is set to fall off a cliff.
While
Crisil has forecast India’s GDP growth to contract 5 per
cent in fiscal 2021, SBI’s Economic Research Department (ERD) has painted a grimmer
picture, pegging the real GDP growth at minus 6.8 per cent.
The GDP
contraction forecast comes against the backdrop of the Reserve Bank of India Governor
Shaktikanta Das stating late last week that “the global
economy is inexorably headed into recession.”
Crisil warned
that the first quarter will suffer a staggering 25 per cent contraction. SBI’s ERD
believes that Q1 (April-June) GDP FY21 loss will be humongous and could even exceed
40 per cent.
Moody’s
Investors Service, in a recent report, observed that even before the coronavirus
outbreak, the economy was growing at its slowest pace in six years. The economic
impetus from direct fiscal spending is also limited, it added.
Fourth
recession
According
to Crisil, in the past 69 years, India has, as per available
data, seen only three recessions — in fiscals 1958, 1966 and 1980. The reason was
the same each time — a monsoon shock that hit agriculture, and then a sizeable part
of the economy.
NR Bhanumurthy, Professor, National Institute of Public Finance
and Policy (NIPFP), told that “a lot will hinge on how the stimulus measures are
implemented, especially ensuring quick credit disbursement by banks. There could
be some measures with fiscal expansion in the right places. These could include
pushing more money in ongoing projects, allocating more resources for rural development
as the multiplier impact will be quick as well as bank recapitalisation.”
SBI’s
ERD has estimated the district-wise, zone-wise loss in gross state domestic product
(GSDP) for each State and found that the total GSDP loss due to Covid-19 for states
in FY21 stands at ₹30.3-lakh crore, which is 13.5 per cent of the total GSDP.
A state-wise
analysis indicates that the top 10 States accounted for 75 per cent of the total
GDP loss, with Maharashtra contributing 15.6 per cent, followed by Tamil Nadu (9.4
per cent) and Gujarat (8.6 per cent). These three States also have the largest number
of confirmed Covid-19 cases in India, ERD said.
Crisil assessed
that about 10 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in real terms could be permanently
lost. So, going back to the growth rates seen before the pandemic is unlikely in
the next three fiscals.
To catch-up
would require average GDP growth to surge to 11 per cent over the next three fiscals,
something that has never happened before, it added.
Madan
Sabnavis, Chief Economist, CARE
Ratings, said: “What the Government should ideally do is to announce some major
tax cuts so that spending power at the individual level increases. Then the you (Government) have to get rid of the lockdown for sure
because if I can’t step out, I will not buy or go in for any discretionary spending.
In fact, you should work on the premise that if today you lift the lockdown, there
is a certain amount of pent-up demand which will come to the fore.
“...Also,
since corporates will be making losses this year, they too will need some breather
on the tax front. The government should also take up infrastructure projects and
start spending money. That is the only way to create jobs and demand.”