IMF Scales Down Growth Projection, says
Indian Economy will Contract by 4.5% this Fiscal
·
Expects a Bounce-back in FY 2021-22, Still
Lowers Forecast
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has cut its
projection for India as well as global growth. The agency estimates show that
the Indian economy will contract this fiscal, but will bounce back smartly
during the next fiscal.
“India’s economy is projected to contract by 4.5 per cent
following a longer period of lockdown and slower recovery than anticipated in April,”
IMF said in the latest update of ‘World Economic Outlook.’ Interestingly, IMF
was among two or three agencies, which had estimated growth in its April
outlook. At that time, it was projected that India will grow by 1.9 per cent
during current fiscal.
This projection has come at a time when India is yet to
see a peak of the Covid-19 virus. Although, the recovery rate is above 50 per
cent and also the death rate is low, still the average number of positive cases
is now 15,000 or more.
More significantly, metros such as Delhi, Mumbai and
Chennai are witnessing sharp surge in the cases affecting the path of normalcy
during first phase of nationwide opening up. The governments — both Central and
States — have said repeatedly that there will be no further lockdown. But
economic activities are still facing uncertainties.
Like various agencies, IMF too expects better days ahead.
It projects growth of 6 per cent during the next fiscal. However, it is 1.4
percentage points lower than the April outlook. Taking note of liquidity
support under Atmanirbhar Bharat package, it feels
that various sectors will gain from that.
“India has unveiled liquidity support (4.5 per cent of
GDP) through loans and guarantees for businesses and farmers and equity
injections into financial institutions and the electricity sector,” the report
said.
Bleak global economy
Titled ‘A Crisis Like No Other,
An Uncertain Recovery’, the update on World Economic Outlook projects global
growth at (–) 4.9 per cent in 2020, which is 1.9 percentage points below the
April forecast.
The pandemic has had a greater negative impact on
activity in the first half of 2020 than anticipated, and the recovery is
projected to be more gradual than previously forecast. In 2021 global growth is
projected at 5.4 per cent.
“Overall, this would leave 2021 GDP some 6˝ percentage
points lower than in the pre-Covid-19 projections of January 2020,” the report
mentioned.
According to the report, strong multilateral cooperation
remains essential on multiple fronts. Liquidity assistance is urgently needed
for countries confronting health crises and external funding shortfalls,
including through debt relief and financing through the global financial safety
net.
Beyond the pandemic, policymakers must cooperate to
resolve trade and technology tensions that endanger an eventual recovery from
the Covid-19 crisis.
Furthermore, building on the record drop in greenhouse
gas emissions during the pandemic, policymakers should both implement their
climate change mitigation commitments and work together to scale up equitably
designed carbon taxation or equivalent schemes.
The global community must act now to avoid a repeat of
this catastrophe by building global stockpiles of essential supplies and
protective equipment, funding research and supporting public health systems,
and putting in place effective modalities for delivering relief to the
neediest, it said.