HomeNewsBusinessEconomyFirst quarter GDP shows welcome recovery in consumption and private capex

First quarter GDP shows welcome recovery in consumption and private capex

The GVA or gross value added number is more relevant this quarter, and this number at 6.8 percent is stronger in the April-June quarter than it was in the previous Jan-March quarter

September 02, 2024 / 07:52 IST
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The disappointment in the GDP data is that the two sectors that have shown sub-par growth - agriculture and trade, hotels, transport and communication - are both employment heavy and largely informal sector
The disappointment in the GDP data is that the two sectors that have shown sub-par growth - agriculture and trade, hotels, transport and communication - are both employment heavy and largely informal sector

Headlines that describe the just-announced first quarter GDP as the slowest in five quarters don't do justice to what is a reasonably robust quarter of growth. As will be explained shortly, the GVA or gross value added number is more relevant this quarter, and this number at 6.8 percent is stronger in the April-June quarter than it was in the previous Jan-March quarter. Likewise private final consumption and capital formation at 7.5 percent each are both indicating that the economy's growth is getting broad-based.

But let us address the headline GDP number of 6.7 percent which, on the face of it, is lowest in five quarters. The NSO or the National Statistical Organization doesn't measure GDP, but GVA or gross value added, which is the amount of value added output generated by each sector. To this it adds indirect taxes and subtracts subsidies to get the GDP. Now the government retained large subsidy payouts in FY23 to address the last remaining impact of Covid pandemic but withdrew them in Fy24. Hence the GDP in FY23 at 7 percent is actually understated (as the large component of subsidy got subtracted from the GVA) while the GDP in FY24 got overstated to 8.2 percent because subsidies were withdrawn and hence a much smaller subsidy component was subtracted from GVA. The FY24 GDP got overstated because of base effect created by the subsidies. Because of these distortions to the GDP, its better to look at the GVA to get a sense of the economy's trajectory. Here are the annual and quarterly numbers

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