HomeNewsBusinessEconomyMuted Jan-Mar showing indicates inflation, other factors have hit consumption

Muted Jan-Mar showing indicates inflation, other factors have hit consumption

While the sharp rebound in investments in FY22 has been hailed as a huge positive, the latest GDP numbers do not hold a lot of good news on private consumption

June 02, 2022 / 13:17 IST
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Shopping malls experienced a recovery during the festive season last year as shoppers returned with the ebbing of the pandemic’s second wave, but celebrations were cut short by the onset of the third wave.
Shopping malls experienced a recovery during the festive season last year as shoppers returned with the ebbing of the pandemic’s second wave, but celebrations were cut short by the onset of the third wave.

Among the low-base-effect fuelled annual GDP numbers released on May 31 by the statistics ministry, there was one rather subdued quarterly figure: Private Final Consumption Expenditure.

Private Final Consumption Expenditure — or PFCE — was up a mere 1.8 percent year-on-year in the January-March quarter. PFCE refers to individuals' spending on goods and services.

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Lest it be forgotten, for FY22 as a whole, PFCE was up 7.9 percent. Compared to FY20—as is often done to bypass the distortion caused by the coronavirus pandemic—PFCE was 1.4 percent higher in FY22.

The obvious reason for the marginal increase in private consumption in the first quarter of 2022 is the omicron variant-led third wave, which led to restrictions being imposed on movement and economic activities in several parts of the country. This hurt services, particularly contact-intensive ones, the most.