India’s GDP surpasses 8% now that the huge election is over

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Insights from The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and India Development Review

The news

India’s GDP grew 8.2% in the fiscal year ended March, according to data released Friday, a boost for Prime Minister Narendra Modi just hours before polls close in the country’s six-week elections that he is expected to hold. to win.

The economy grew 7.8% in the latest quarter, surpassing the government’s forecast of 5.9% and paving the way for India to become the world’s fastest-growing major economy this year. The World Bank’s Managing Director of Operations told CNBC in February that India would do so should maintain an annual growth rate of approximately 8% to achieve its ambition of becoming a high-income developed nation by 2047.

SIGNALS

Semafor Signals: Global insights into today’s biggest stories.

The euphoria about India’s growth hides deeper problems

Sources: The Wall Street Journal, Associated Press, Bloomberg

India’s GDP measurement may mask this the weaknesses of its huge informal sector, writes The Wall Street Journal. Private consumption – the biggest driver of GDP – grew slower than pre-pandemic levels, while optimism in the economy is not leading to more investment, an economist said. “You have a thriving economy for people higher up the socio-economic ladder, but people lower down are really having a hard time,the director of the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace told the Associated Press. The result is slow wage growth, high interest rates and heavy borrowing has weakened the purchasing power of more than 300 million familiesthat accounts for 70% of GDP, argued Bloomberg columnist Andy Mukherjee.

India has ‘bloodless job creation’

Sources: Project Syndicate, India Development Review, The Indian Express

The hype about India’s economic prospects ignores a problem 75 years in the making:Anemic job creation,” argued Ashoka Mody, a former economist at the International Monetary Fund, in Project Syndicate. Policymakers have offered only gimmicks in response to this fundamental development deficit, he wrote, and should instead offer investments in human capital. Indias Unemployment growth tends to affect women in particularwho face “increased exploitation, poor working conditions, lack of mobility and a greater risk of violence,” according to a columnist for the India Development Review. Creating more productive employment opportunities should be a top priority for the next government, The Indian Express wrote in a recent editorial.

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