City
Epaper

Economic Survey pegs India's GDP growth rate at 6.5-7 pc for 2024-25

By IANS | Updated: July 22, 2024 13:15 IST

New Delhi, July 22 The Economic Survey tabled by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Parliament on Monday projected ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 22 The Economic Survey tabled by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Parliament on Monday projected India’s GDP growth rate at 6.5 to 7 per cent for 2024-25 as it sees the economy on a strong wicket.

The survey states that global economic growth will be 3.2 per cent in 2023 as per the April World Economic Outlook. Diverging growth patterns have emerged among countries. The stark difference in the growth performance of countries has been on account of domestic structural issues, uneven exposure to geopolitical conflicts and the impact of monetary policy tightening.

India’s economy carried forward the momentum it built in FY23 into FY24 despite a gamut of external challenges. India’s real GDP grew by 8.2 per cent in FY24, exceeding the 8 per cent mark in three out of four quarters of FY24. The focus on maintaining macroeconomic stability ensured that external challenges had minimal impact on India’s economy.

The Government’s thrust on capex and sustained momentum in private investment has boosted capital formation growth. Gross Fixed Capital Formation increased by 9 per cent in real terms in 2023-24.

Moving forward, healthier corporate and bank balance sheets will further strengthen private investment. The positive trends in the residential real estate market indicate that the household sector capital formation is increasing significantly, the survey states.

Inflationary pressures stoked by global troubles, supply chain disruptions, and vagaries of monsoons have been deftly managed by administrative and monetary policy responses. As a result, after averaging 6.7 per cent in FY23, retail inflation declined to 5.4 per cent in FY24, it adds.

The fiscal balances of the general government have improved progressively despite expansionary public investment. Tax compliance gains driven by procedural reforms, expenditure restraint, and increasing digitisation helped India achieve this fine balance, it adds.

The external balance has been pressured by subdued global demand for goods, but strong services exports largely counterbalanced this. As a result, the Current Account Deficit (CAD) stood at 0.7 per cent of the GDP during FY24, an improvement from the deficit of 2.0 per cent of GDP in FY23.

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

NationalNotification issued for election of BJP's Telangana unit president

InternationalThe General’s Republic: How Pakistan’s military hijacked the state (IANS Analysis)

NationalThe General’s Republic: How Pakistan’s military hijacked the state (IANS Analysis)

EntertainmentEmma Stone praises Austin Butler's quick thinking during viral bee encounter at Cannes

InternationalIsraeli government allows return to Gaza border communities, citing no security risk

Business Realted Stories

BusinessCentre issues model rules to states/UTs to aid ease of doing business in agroforestry

BusinessYemeni rial plunges to historic low, worsening humanitarian crisis

BusinessTorrent Pharma to buy controlling 46.39 pc stake in JB Chemicals for Rs 25,689 crore

BusinessCentre disburses Rs 1,162 crore under telecom PLI scheme

Business‘GoIStats’ mobile app launched for real-time access to official statistical data