India’s Q4 GDP growth pegged at 2.7%, FY22 at 8.5%: Analysts

Official data on the economy is expected to be released on May 31.

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Upcoming release of official data for economic performance is likely to register a 2.7 per cent growth for the January-March period, and the FY22 growth is expected to be 8.5 per cent, economists at SBI said on Thursday.

They were, however, quick to add that it is difficult to comprehend the numbers due to the spate of revisions that we have seen till now and termed this situation as a forecaster’s nightmare.

“We …believe the GDP projection for Q4 FY22 is clouded by significant uncertainties. For example, even a one per cent downward revision in Q1 GDP estimates of FY22 from 20.3 per cent, all other things remaining unchanged, could push Q4 GDP growth to 3.8 per cent,” they noted.

Official data on the economy is expected to be released on May 31.

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) had projected Q4 GDP at ₹41.04 lakh crore and FY22 real GDP growth at ₹147.7 lakh crore, an improvement of 1.7 per cent over pre-pandemic levels, they said, adding that the ‘SBI Nowcasting model’ with an unchanged quarterly numbers pegs the growth rate of Q4GDP at ₹40 lakh crores, that is lower by ₹1 lakh crore from the CSO preliminary projections.

“We believe that downward adjustments in Q1, Q2 and Q3 numbers could have a soothing impact on Q4 GDP numbers. Every ₹10,000 crore revision adds/subtracts 0.07 per cent from GDP growth,” the note said.

Early trends for the March quarter results from listed corporates reported better growth numbers across parameters, as compared to the year-ago period, with a contraction in operating margin due to higher input cost, it said.

Sectors such as steel, FMCG, chemicals, IT and auto ancillary, reported better growth numbers while automobile, cement, capital goods, edible oil registered negative growth in profits despite a growth in topline, it noted.

Meanwhile, the economists said the oil prices are unlikely to stay elevated for long, and added they expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to hike rates again at the June policy review.

The close coordination between RBI and the government was welcomed by the economists by terming it as the best thing to have emerged during the pandemic.

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