Mumbai: India's real GDP will grow at 10.4 per cent in FY22, after a 7.8 per cent contraction in the pandemic-impacted FY21, India Ratings and Research said on Wednesday.
The domestic ratings agency, however, made it clear that the higher growth in FY22 will be due to the low base and from a trend growth perspective, India will still be at a lower level at the end of the next fiscal.
"This fiscal year (FY21) is giving us the worst growth in independent India, next fiscal will be the best because of the base effect because we have slowed down so much this year," its Chief Economist Devendra Pant told reporters on a call.
The agency has a "cautiously optimistic" view on the Indian economy at present, he said, welcoming a slew of Budget measures including the transparency and credible assumptions it makes.
However, consumption, which has been the mainstay of growth for many years, has been lagging. After consecutive years of slowing growth and now a contraction, the rational consumer has decided to cut down on expenses, he said.
Economic growth potential has slipped to not more than 5 to 6 per cent as against the 7.5 to 8 per cent levels it was pegged at before the beginning of the growth slowdown in FY17, the agency's Principal Economist Sunil Kumar Sinha said.
He said the 15th Finance Commission also assumes a similar growth trajectory in the medium term and warned that pump-priming the economy to achieve more than potential will lead to inflationary pressures.
Sinha further said the economy will be merely covering the lost ground of FY21 in the next fiscal, and if looked at from a longer term lens, it will be only a marginal recovery.