City
Epaper

There are signs that capital formation growth rebounding: Finance ministry

By ANI | Updated: December 26, 2024 19:15 IST

New Delhi [India], December 26 : The Ministry of Finance on Thursday asserted in positive that there are signs ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], December 26 : The Ministry of Finance on Thursday asserted in positive that there are signs of capital formation growth rebounding early in the second half of 2024-25.

The finance ministry in its monthly report noted that Union government capex picking up pace, which in the first two quarters were slow.

The Indian economy grew by 5.4 per cent in real terms in the July-September quarter of the current financial year 2024-25. The quarterly growth was quite lower than RBI's forecast of 7 per cent. In the April-June quarter too, India's GDP grew at a slower pace than was estimated by its central bank. Much of it is due to low capex spending and weak consumption demand.

On average, India grew at 6 per cent in the first half of 2024-25.

The finance ministry's monthly report published Thursday noted that from a demand perspective, private consumption remained steady because of sustained rural demand, while investment growth softened in July-September quarter.

"The slowdown in investment growth can be attributed to a softening of public capex and private capex levels being affected by global uncertainties, excess capacity, and fears of dumping," it said.

Against that backdrop, it noted that there are signs of capital formation growth rebounding with government capex picking up pace.

Coming to inflation, the inflationary pressures softened in November 2024, driven by lower food and core inflation.

The finance ministry argues that an influx of fresh produce in the market has moderated vegetable price pressures.

"Healthy progress in rabi sowing indicates a promising harvest that will help alleviate food inflation pressures. The downward trend in international crude oil prices is a positive factor for domestic inflation, while elevated global edible oil prices remain a risk," the finance ministry report read.

Looking ahead, the report asserted that India's growth outlook in 2025-26 for the coming years is bright when viewed through the lens of Indian domestic economic fundamentals, but added that it is also subject to fresh uncertainties.

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

EntertainmentNicolas Cage steps into shadows as 'Spider-Noir' trailer drops, unveiling gritty 1930s Marvel thriller

EntertainmentArchana Puran Singh's Son Ayushmaan Sethi Falls Victim to Credit Card Scam, ₹87,000 Deducted in Fraud Transaction

NationalProbe underway after Ballia man dies as petrol pump allegedly denies fuel to ambulance; DM assures action

NationalPM Modi extends advance wishes for Buddha Purnima in 133rd episode of Mann Ki Baat

FootballPremier League: Arsenal, Liverpool, Spurs secure wins as title race tightens

Business Realted Stories

BusinessFed meet, Q4 earnings, US-Iran tensions likely to drive stock market this week

Business70% of Indian goods to enter New Zealand duty-free under FTA; big boost for MSMEs, says Piyush Goyal

BusinessCAIT urges govt for robust national e-commerce policy to safeguard crores of small traders

BusinessWheat production remains stable and resilient despite weather variations: Centre

BusinessJP Morgan downgrades India equities to 'Neutral', bets on Asia tech amid AI-led shift