Arul Louis (IANS) –
Indian economy’s growth rate projection for this year has been raised by 0.7 percent to 6.9 percent from the forecast made in January by the UN. It retains its position as the world’s fastest-growing large economy.
The better outlook is fueled by lower inflation, robust exports, and increased foreign investments, Hamid Rashid, the chief of the UN’s Global Economic Monitoring Branch, said on Thursday.
“The drivers (of higher projection) are very simple: inflation has come down significantly, and that means the fiscal position is not as constrained as in other countries,” he said at the release of the mid-year edition of the World Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) report.
Exports, another element in the improved projection, have been “pretty robust” and India is also benefiting from more investments coming in from other Western sources while the flow to China is coming down, Rashid said.
“India has become an alternative investment source or destination for many Western companies,” he added.
Another factor benefiting India, he said, is the special import arrangement India has with Russia for oil that is lowering its cost, he said.
The WESP report also gave a positive picture of the employment situation, saying: “In India, labour market indicators have also improved amid robust growth and higher labor participation.”
It said women’s participation in labor has increased particularly in South Asia.
India’s growth projection for next year remains at 6.6 percent, which was made in January.
Last year, the WESP report said, India’s economy grew by 7.5 percent and in 2022 by 7.7 percent when it received a big short-term boost coming out of the drastic Covid slowdown.
The report also revised the projection for the world economy this year to 2.7 percent, an increase of 0.3 percent from January.
“Most major economies have managed to bring down inflation without increasing unemployment and triggering a recession,” the report said adding a cautionary note, “However, the outlook is only cautiously optimistic as higher-for-longer interest rates, debt difficulties, and escalating geopolitical risks will continue to challenge stable and sustained economic growth”.
The developing economies on the whole are growing at a faster clip — clocking 4.1 percent — than the developed economies which are expected to record only a 1.6 percent growth rate this year.
However, the growth among developing countries is uneven, the WESP report stated.
While large developing economies like India, Indonesia and Mexico are benefiting from strong domestic and external demand, many African, Latin American and Caribbean economies are on a “low-growth trajectory” because of “lingering political instability”, higher borrowing costs and exchange rate fluctuations, it said.
China’s economy is projected to grow by 4.8 percent this year, making it the second fastest-growing large economy.
The US economy is projected to grow by 2.3 percent this year.
“Despite the most aggressive monetary tightening in decades, a scenario of hard landing of the United States economy has receded,” the report said.
Looking ahead, the WESP saw risks and opportunities in rapid technology changes.
“The breakneck pace of technological change — including in machine learning and artificial intelligence — presents new opportunities and risks to the global economy, promising to boost productivity and advance knowledge on the one hand, while exacerbating technological divides and reshaping labor markets on the other,” the report said.