The World Bank on Tuesday kept its FY25 economic growth projection for India unchanged at 6.4 per cent, mainly on account of strong domestic demand, rising public infrastructure spending and strong private-sector credit growth. However, it projected that the private consumption growth might taper off due to high food inflation and diminishing pent-up demand.
In its biannual ‘Global Economic Prospects’ report, the World Bank said India was anticipated to maintain the fastest growth rate among the world’s largest economies, but its post-pandemic recovery was expected to slow, with estimated growth of 6.3 per cent in FY24, before recovering gradually to 6.5 per cent in FY26.
The multilateral development bank’s forecast did not take into account the National Statistical Office’s (NSO’s) the first advance estimates, released on Friday, which had projected 7.3 per cent growth for India in FY24 — higher than the Reserve Bank of India’s estimate of 7 per cent — assuming an investment-led recovery.
“Investment is envisaged to decelerate marginally but remain robust, supported by higher public investment and improved corporate balance sheets, including in the banking sector. Private consumption growth is likely to taper off, as the post-pandemic pent-up demand diminishes and persistent high food price inflation constrains spending, particularly among low-income households. Meanwhile, government consumption is expected to grow slowly, in line with the central government’s efforts to lower the share of current spending,” the World Bank report said.
The report also said that growth in most regions in calendar year 2025 might strengthen, coinciding with an expected step-up in global growth, with the South Asian region projected to remain the fastest-growing region, led by strong growth in India underpinned by resilient domestic demand.
“Commodity importers, excluding China, grew at a more robust pace of 4.2 per cent in 2023. This was largely due to India’s continued resilience amid increasing public investment and solid services sector growth. Excluding India and China, output in these economies expanded by 3.1 per cent. In some commodity importers, severe food and energy price shocks have eroded real wage growth since end of 2021, dampening consumption growth,” the report added.
Besides, the report mentioned that India’s strong performance in FY24 was led by robust public investment growth and vibrant services activity, thanks to resilient domestic demand for consumer services and exports of business services, even as merchandise exports slowed, reflecting weak external demand.
“Headline retail inflation remained within monetary authorities’ target band of 2-6 per cent throughout most of 2023, with policy rates being kept unchanged since February 2023,” the report added.
Further, on the fiscal front, the report said government revenues were expected to gain from solid corporate profits, and current expenditures were likely to decrease with the conclusion of pandemic-related measures.
Meanwhile, the report also cautioned that the Lok Sabha elections scheduled in 2024 could dampen activity in the private sector, including foreign investment. “If combined with political or social unrest and elevated violence, this could further disrupt and weaken economic growth.”
First Published: Jan 09 2024 | 8:47 PM IST