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Amid high inflation & weak rupee, Fin Min review says economic performance 'impressive'
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IANS | 22 Oct, 2022
Even as economic growth and rising inflation remain major concerns for
India, with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman saying that these twin
challenges would be in focus in the next Union Budget, the monthly
economic review for September has said that country's economic
performance has been "impressive" in the first half of 2022-23.
"Indian
economic performance in the first half of 2022-23 has been impressive
compared to the world. As measured by PMI composite index, the economic
activity level was higher for India at 56.7 compared to 51.0 for the
World level during April-Sept 2022," said the economic review which was
released on Saturday by the Finance Ministry.
"While wholesale
inflation has significantly reduced from its peak of 16.6 per cent in
May 2022 to 10.7 per cent in September 2022 on account of moderating
commodity prices and government measures, retail inflation remains above
the RBI's upper tolerance band due to an uptick in food prices.
However, food inflation is expected to moderate as the harvesting and
procurement seasons progress, thereby contributing to a declining
headline retail inflation in the rest of the fiscal year," it said while
elaborating on inflation.
"On the external front, the rupee has
performed relatively well in first half of 2022-23 compared to other
major economies, reflecting the strong fundamentals of the Indian
economy."
The rupee incidentally had touched a historic low of
83.18 earlier this week, even as Sitharaman said that she saw it more as
a case of the dollar strengthening than the rupee falling.
The
economic review for September 2022 however noted that "the country
should be able to meet these challenges and keep the economy growing
steadily".
"Prudent macroeconomic policies that have served the
country well since 2014 continue to remain essential. As is the case
with batting in swinging conditions, balls well-left (policy errors
avoided) will be as important as balls played well (policy decisions
taken)," it said.
The Central government's continuous thrust on
capital expenditure promotes broad-based growth by facilitating private
sector capital formation. Significant pick-up in consumption has
resulted in a more-than-proportionate jump in GST revenues, a more
robust economic recovery could allow the collections to settle at an
elevated level, proving the high revenue productivity of the broad-based
consumption, the review further noted.
A well-capitalised banking system has led to an upswing in credit disbursement to the retail, industry and services segments.
"High-Frequency
Indicators (HFIs) suggest a continued broadening of traction in
services activity. E-way bills, in particular, point to the overall
growth of inter-state wholesale and retail trade.
"Going forward,
the pent-up demand in the services sector, combined with a strong
economic outlook for India, will drive growth in the service sector,"
the review said.
Service sector firms are positive about demand
conditions, sales turnover, their hiring plans and the overall business
situation they expect in third quarter of the current fiscal.
However
it cautioned that "even as India remains one of the bright spots in an
otherwise gloomy global scenario where the dark clouds of recession
gather, the country's fiscal and monetary authorities must remain
watchful. The globalised nature of India's economy portends that even as
inflationary pressures abate, another challenge to macroeconomic
stability will rear its head in the form of external sector pressures".
On
the one hand, the US Federal Reserve continues to be aggressive in the
fight against inflation, thereby signalling further interest rate hikes.
This may lower capital inflows, increase pressure on the rupee to
depreciate, and make imports of essential commodities costlier. On the
other hand, an unfavourable global economic outlook is bound to moderate
the growth of exports, affecting the country's trade balance, the
review said.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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