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How deep could be the Q1 contraction?

Corporate performance and GST revenue trends suggest GDP decline could be unexpectedly severe

August 17, 2020 / 23:48 IST
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Having said that output may contract this year, it was widely expected the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would present the growth (and inflation) projections at its August 6 meeting. However, this did not happen. For the lockdown quarter of April-June, private forecasters predict an intense GDP contraction that some project as much as -25 percent.

Monthly indicators such as industrial production and purchasing managers’ indices (PMIs) do show sharp contractions, particularly severe in services; the weekly mobility indicators too suggest activities remain almost one-third lower than in February. A coherent picture is still hard to obtain.

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The April-June quarter is an unruly mix of full, partial and scattered lockdowns that weren’t exactly linear with spread or growth of infections. Confusion is compounded because no official estimate exists — the first-quarter GDP growth outturn will be published only at the end of this month. With arrivals of some corporate results for the quarter, trends in indirect taxes or GST revenues offer some clue. What do these portend for April-June GDP growth?

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