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GDP likely to maintain a 9 pc growth rate in FY22

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Mumbai: The country's real gross domestic product (GDP) is likely to maintain a 9 pc growth rate in fiscal 2022 and 2023, amid concerns over the Omicron variant of Covid-19, says a report.

The Indian economy grew at 8.4 percent in the second quarter of the current fiscal, as against a growth of 20.1 percent in the April-June quarter.

"We are maintaining our forecast of a 9 percent GDP expansion in FY2022, with a clear K-shaped divergence amongst the formal and informal parts of the economy, and the large gaining at the cost of the I small.

"Looking ahead, we expect the economy to maintain a similar 9 percent growth in FY2023," domestic rating agency. Icra Ltd Chief Economist Aditi to Nayar said in the report.

She expects the percentage of double-vaccinated adults to rise to 85-9p percent by March 2022.

While the announcement of booster doses and vaccines for the 15-18 age group is welcome, it remains to be seen whether all the existing vaccines would offer adequate protection against the new Omicron variant to avert a third wave in India, Nayar said.

In any case, fresh restrictions being introduced by several States to curb the spread of Covid-19 may temporarily in- interrupt the economic recovery, especially in the contact-intensive sectors in Q4 FY2022, she added.

Nayar, however, expects the expansion in FY2023 to be more meaningful and tangible than the base effect-led rise in FY2022.

"Based on our assumptions of the GDP growth, if the Covid-19 pandemic had not emerged ys the actual shrinkage that occurred curred in FY2021 and the expected recovery in the next two years, the net loss to the Indian economy from the pandemic during FY2021-23 is estimated at Rs ba 39.3 lakh crore, in real terms," she said.

The available data for Q3 FY2022 does not offer convincing evidence that the tɩ Monetary Policy Committee's (MPC's) S criteria of a durable and sustainable growth recovery have been met, to confirm a change in the Monetary Policy stance to neutral in February 2022, the rating agency said.

It believes that rising consumption will push capacity utilization above the crucial threshold of 75 percent by the end of 2022, which should then trigger a broad-based pick-up in private sector investment activity in 2023.

The agency also expects the viability of tax revenue growth to spur faster government spending in 2022.

Source- PTI

BNE ADMIN