A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, January 30, 2015
Economic growth revised up by almost 50 percent
A labourer works at the construction site of a residential complex in Kolkata August 29, 2014.
(Reuters) - India's economy grew almost 50 percent faster in 2013/14
than earlier thought, the government said on Friday after changing a
formula, a reminder of the challenges that unreliable statistics present
to Indian policymakers.
In the year leading up to the elections that brought Prime Minister
Narendra Modi to power last May, the economy grew 6.9 percent, not the
4.7 percent reported earlier, chief statistician T.C.A. Anant told
reporters.
Modi's campaign succeeded partly because of the widespread feeling that
his predecessors from the Congress party had plunged the economy into
the country's longest deceleration in growth in a generation.
The revised formula, showing a faster recovery, includes
under-represented and informal sectors as well as items such as
smartphones and LED television sets in gross domestic product.
That could boost India's growth figure in the year ending in March 2015,
which the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has projected to be around 5.5
percent.
Some in government predict the change will help bring down the fiscal
deficit as a share of gross domestic product, making it easier for Modi
to trim the gap to a seven-year low of 4.1 percent in the year to March
despite a shortfall in revenue.
However, Anant said the overall size of India's $1.8 trillion economy
had not changed enough to shift the ratio significantly, adding: "Our
ranking in GDP terms will not change as the size of economy has almost
remained the same."
The new methodology moves India more in line with global standards by
measuring the economy at market prices, and by tracking consumer rather
than wholesale inflation.
"This will help lower market distortions and give better representation
to the manufacturing sector," said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economic
adviser at State Bank of India.
But the frequent GDP revisions and other deficient data are a headache for economic planners.
Among the worst offenders are the volatile index for industrial
production and the jobless numbers, seen as very unrepresentative. The
latest GDP revision is part of a change to the method of calculating
national accounts that happens every five years.
"It is a problem for the government and economists who are trying to
understand the exact situation," said D.H. Pai Panandiker, president of
RPG Foundation, an economic policy group in New Delhi. "It is even a
problem for the RBI, that doesn't have a full view about how the economy
is performing."
(Additional reporting by Suvashree Choudhury in Mumbai and Andrew
MacAskill in New Delhi; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Douglas
Busvine and Kevin Liffey)