Double-digit slump isn't the end of the world, assures Arvind Panagariya
Economic Times, September 10 2020 The strict lockdown forced by Coronavirus during the bulk of the first quarter of fiscal year 2020-21 has translated in a sharp decline in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The latest estimates place year-on-year decline in GDP during April-June quarter at 23.9%. What this means is that if the economy were to shrink by this same percentage in the remaining three quarters, growth rate in 2020-21 would turn out to be -23.9%. Of course, no one is making such a dire prediction. C. Rangarajan, a former RBI Governor, has even written arguing that we cannot rule out the possibility of a small positive growth during the full year. Some commentators have tried to connect this decline to the steady decline in the quarterly growth rate from a robust 8.2% in the fourth quarter of 2017-18 to 3.1% in the fourth quartier of 2019-20. The argument these commentators seem to be making is that the large decline in April-June quarter represents fundamental weakness of the economy rather than the onslaught of Coronavirus. In my view, this…
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