City
Epaper

6.7 pc GDP growth inspiring despite deepening geopolitical distress: Industry

By IANS | Updated: August 30, 2024 20:05 IST

New Delhi, Aug 30 India has been in a glorious position post-Covid, being the fastest-growing economy in the ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 30 India has been in a glorious position post-Covid, being the fastest-growing economy in the world with over 7 per cent growth which is visible across the board and if we continue to grow at 7 per cent, the effective growth rate is expected to be 11-12 per cent because we have a very strong parallel economy which is also functioning strong, experts said on Friday.

India’s growth at 6.7 per cent in the first quarter (Q1) of FY2024-25 is inspiring despite deepening geopolitical distress and global macroeconomic headwinds. Manufacturing, construction and electricity sectors have become the major growth drivers in the recent quarters.

"The manufacturing sector has grown at 7 per cent in Q1 FY 2024-25 on the back of strategic reforms and prudent policy measures by the government and efforts of industry," said Sanjeev Agrawal, President, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Vivek Rathi, National Director, Research, Knight Frank India, said the momentum in the real estate and infrastructure industries has sustained and is reflected in the 10.5 per cent growth seen in the construction sector. The monsoon has spread well, improving prospects in the subsequent quarters.

"India still remains the fastest growing economy among the major economies of the world. Critical sectors, including manufacturing, continue to retain strength and should be further picking up, going forward," said Deepak Sood, Secretary General, Assocham.

The gross fixed capital formation at 34.8 per cent of GDP for Q1 FY 2024-25 is indicating steady capacity expansion for more employment opportunities in the coming times, said industry experts.

Aman Aggarwal, a renowned economist, said a robust parallel economy is also having a rebounding impact in terms of consumption.

"India is also the fourth largest foreign exchange reserve holder in the world, along with one of the largest FDI recipients in the world. The country has become the favourite destination for investment globally which is creating this rebounding effect for the country," Aggarwal told IANS.

Foreign direct inflows to India rose by 26.4 per cent, reaching $22.4 billion during April-June 2024, marking the fastest expansion in nearly five quarters, according to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalNo govt events in hotels, private venues: Rajasthan Chief Secretary issues circular

NationalK'taka bypolls: Voting crosses 54 pc in Bagalkot, 49 pc in Davanagere; SDPI, Cong workers clash

NagpurAlfiya bags silver in Asian boxing event

National'Absolutely wrong': Husain Dalwai after Maha Cong councillor refuses to sing ‘Vande Mataram'

NationalProactive approach key to tackling cybercrime, says Gujarat DGP

Business Realted Stories

BusinessGalgotias University continues to face heavy backlash over ads after 'dog-robot' row

BusinessCentre in talks with Assam Petrochemicals, others to secure methanol supply for pharma amid West Asia disruptions

BusinessTCS clocks 12 pc jump in Q4 net profit, announces Rs 31 dividend

BusinessKatalon Launches True Platform: The Trust and Accountability Layer for Agentic Software Delivery

BusinessIndia, Bhutan sign key pacts to boost bilateral power trade