Hidden reserves

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| What is heartening about the ongoing expansion is its relatively broad base. The momentum is coming from a number of sectors, which suggests that a number of drivers are at work simultaneously. According to the use-based classification, consumer goods as a whole grew by almost 18 per cent, although on a low base of less than 5 per cent. More importantly, capital goods grew by over 15 per cent on a rather high base of about 15 per cent last July. Focusing on individual industries, textile products, machinery and non-metallic mineral products performed respectably, growing in the 10-15 per cent range, while metals and transportation equipment hit the 20 per cent mark. |
| At the end of the first quarter, the industrial numbers had made it almost certain that GDP would grow by over 8 per cent during the quarter. The July numbers suggest that the momentum will carry strongly into the second quarter as well. While this is generally good news, it places policy-makers in something of a quandary. For the last several quarters, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been warning of an overheating economy, with accelerating inflation an inevitable consequence. It has pursued a gradual, calibrated policy of increasing interest rates, designed to rein in GDP growth to the 7.5-8 per cent range, which it apparently believes is sustainable. However, the economy seems hell-bent on disproving the validity of this perception, and shows no signs of responding to the RBI's signals. What rising interest rates don't seem to be doing, one might have expected oil prices to do. But, keeping in mind the incomplete pass-through, they don't seem to be doing it, either. The first- quarter profit numbers from the corporate sector also displayed a seeming invulnerability to these rising cost elements. All this suggests that producers in the economy are able to dig deep into their hidden reserves of productivity and efficiency to sustain this powerful momentum in the face of increasingly visible constraints. They probably won't last for ever, but they have provided enough juice to help India cement its place as the second fastest growing economy in the world. The most must be made of them while they last. |
First Published: Sep 15 2006 | 12:00 AM IST