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Q1FY22 GDP growth propped by base effect but still has silver linings: Madhavi Arora of Emkay

Clearly, factors such as better adapted firms and policy response, stable financial conditions and robust global growth spillovers have created growth buffers back home.

September 01, 2021 / 15:57 IST
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The GDP growth rose a material 20.1 percent YoY in Q1FY22 (Emkay: 21.3 percent, Consensus:21 percent) with Real gross value added (GVA) growth at 18.8 percent (Emkay: 19.2 percent Consensus: 19.6 percent), led by pandemic-induced low base effects, but was also marked by lower-than-initially-expected economic losses from Covid-II. Most leading indicators and robust corporate results hinted at decent annualised gain in growth momentum, while the sharp sequential contraction (-13 percent QoQ, nsa) likely reflected the impact of localised restrictions due to Covid-II. Nominal GDP was at 31.7 percent. Amid robust net taxes in Q1FY22, the yawning gap between GDP and GVA growth seen in FY21, has finally reversed.

Supply side shows across-the-board improvement in Q4FY21 with services growth now positive

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The pickup in Q1 GVA growth expectedly largely led by robust manufacturing (49.6 percent) and construction (68.3 percent), which was largely a global phenomenon as well. Services remained a laggard bearing the brunt of Covid. Utility demand remained strong (14.3 percent) as power consumption rose above pre-pandemic levels, while fuel consumption improved. Within services, financial and real estate grew 3.7 percent, and public admin service (part proxy for government spending) improved 5.8 percent yoy but contracted sequentially amid slower government’s revex. Trade, hotel, T&C also improved to 34.3 percent, but saw maximum negative sequential impact amid restricted mobility. Private sector GVA growth made impressive gains of 25.2 percent (4.1 percent prior). Agri sector continued to support the economy growing 4.5 percent (3.1 percent prior).

Expenditure side reflects private consumption remains the key contributor