New Delhi:India’s economy will grow at 8.3% in the current fiscal due to higher spending on infrastructure, rural development, and health, and a stronger-than-expected recovery in services, said the World Bank, adding that the growth rate will decline to 7.5% in the next fiscal. In its Global Economic Prospects report released on Tuesday, the global lender said the better growth prospects witnessed since January this year mask the significant damage to the economic activity from the second Covid wave.
“The economy is expected to follow the same, yet less pronounced, collapse and recovery seen during the first wave. Growth in FY 2022-23 is expected to slow to 7.5%,” said the Bank.
According to the latest data released by the country’s top statistics body on May 31, India’s GDP declined by 7.3% in the last fiscal.
However, the economy turned a corner for the better in the last two quarters of the previous fiscal.
Also Read: Tax cuts can do wonders for economic recovery: SBI
The World Bank said it was due to an aggressive policy response in 2020 that included cuts in interest rates, increases in government expenditure, extension of loans and guarantees as fiscal and monetary policies remained accommodative.
But the ferocious second Covid wave, which killed nearly 1,70,000 people in just two months – April and May, which accounts for more than half of the country’s total Covid deaths since the start of the pandemic in March last year, has adversely impacted the fragile recovery process.
“In India, an enormous second COVID-19 wave is undermining the rebound in services and manufacturing activity. High frequency data, including a renewed drop in foot traffic around work and retail spaces, suggests that activity is again collapsing,” said the Bank in its report.
The World Bank said COVID-19 cases have surged in South Asia and the situation in India has been particularly difficult.
Uncertain future