HomeNewsOpinionGDP: Services sector stands out as a growth engine, but an erratic monsoon could play party pooper

GDP: Services sector stands out as a growth engine, but an erratic monsoon could play party pooper

When companies, individuals, and households take loans, chances are, they are feeling more confident about their business and income prospects, confident enough to commit themselves to long-term loans to buy houses and cars and invest in businesses. The evidence in the national income data indicates a trend towards this.

August 31, 2023 / 21:05 IST
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Image for Representational Purpose only
Image for Representational Purpose only

The hum of an economy on the turn can be heard in crowded restaurants and hotels. Another marker of economic energy is the level of activity in the property market and in financial and other business services such as consulting. If people are eating out more than earlier, if more people are checking into hotels for leisure, and if households are parking more funds in financial products, more often than not, these serve as proxy indicators of the pace and direction of the broader economy.

A greater level of spending in these and related sectors would, other things remaining the same, signal more discretionary spending power and higher household savings. And there are signs of these in the Indian economy. The latest national income data for the first quarter (April-June 2023) bears this out.

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The provisional estimates of national income for the first quarter of 2023-24, put out by the National Statistical Office (NSO) on August 31, show that India’s real, or inflation-adjusted gross domestic product (GDP), grew 7.8 percent during April-June this year, the highest in four quarters. The standout characteristic of this growth has been the momentum of the services sector. During the quarter, the gross value added (GVA) — i.e., GDP minus taxes, considered a better metric to measure economic activity — in trade, hotels, transport, communications, and broadcasting grew 9.2 percent in real terms, despite a very high base of 25.7 percent growth in the same quarter of the previous year.

Buoyant consumer sentiment