Telangana Today
India’s GDP growth seen at 1.2% for Q4 Financial Year 2020
“We believe that Q4 (FY20) GDP growth would be around 1.2 percent as the economic activity in the last seven days of March month was completely suspended due to the nationwide lockdown.”
by PTIMumbai: The country’s GDP is estimated to have grown at 1.2 percent in the last quarter of the previous fiscal as economic activity came to a standstill in the last week of March due to the nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of Covid-19, a report said.
According to SBI’s research report – Ecowrap – the gross domestic product (GDP) growth is likely to be 4.2 percent for FY20 and (-) 6.8 percent for FY21.
The fourth-quarter GDP growth number for FY20 will be announced by the National Statistical Office (NSO) on May 29. In the third quarter of FY20, GDP growth slipped to a nearly seven-year low of 4.7 percent. In Q1 and Q2 of FY20, GDP growth was 5.1 percent and 5.6 percent, respectively. “We believe that Q4 (FY20) GDP growth would be around 1.2 percent as the economic activity in the last seven days of March month was completely suspended due to the nationwide lockdown,” the research report said.
The report sees a loss of at least Rs 1.4 lakh crore during those seven days of lockdown. “Subsequently, the annual FY20 GDP growth would be around 4.2 percent as compared to 5 percent as it was projected earlier,” the report said. It estimates FY21 GDP growth to be around (-) 6.8 percent and gross value added (GVA) growth would be nearly (-) 3.1 percent.
The loss is maximum (around 50 percent) in red zones and where almost all the big districts of the country are located. The combined loss of orange and red zones is around 90 percent of the total loss. State-wise analysis indicates that the top 10 states accounted for 75 percent of total GDP loss with Maharashtra contributing 15.6 percent of total loss followed by Tamil Nadu (9.4 percent) and Gujarat (8.6 percent). These three states also have the largest number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in the country.