'Growth to top 8 pc next fiscal and touch double-digit later'

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Feb 27 2015 | 1:57 PM IST
India's GDP is likely to grow at 8.1-8.5 per cent next fiscal and accelerate to double-digit levels in the coming years on the back of reforms, falling crude prices and likely cut in interest rates, says the Economic Survey.
"In the short run, growth will receive a boost from the cumulative impact of reforms, lower oil prices, likely monetary policy easing facilitated by lower inflation and improved inflationary expectations, and forecasts of a normal monsoon in 2015-16," said the survey tabled in Parliament today by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley ahead of Union Budget.
The GDP expansion this fiscal is estimated at 7.4 per cent, higher from 6.9 per cent achieved in 2013-14.
Using the new estimate for 2014-15 as the base, GDP growth at constant market prices is expected to accelerate to between 8.1 and 8.5 per cent in 2015-16, it said.
"In the coming year, real GDP growth at market prices is estimated to be about 0.6-1.1 percentage points higher vis-a-vis 2014-15," the survey said.
The Economic Survey 2014-15 indicates that "a clear political mandate for reform and a benign external environment now is expected to propel India on to a double digit trajectory".
It said that declines in inflation and "the resulting monetary easing" will provide policy support for growth both by encouraging household spending in interest-sensitive sectors and reducing the debt burden of firms, strengthening their balance sheets.
The RBI, which surprised markets by an unscheduled interest rate (repo rate) cut in January, did not reduced it further from 7.75 per cent.
The final favourable impulse towards higher growth will be the monsoon which is forecast to be normal compared to last year, the survey added.
The government headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which assumed power in May last year, has initiated a slew of economic reforms, including de-regulation of diesel prices, raising FDI caps in several sectors, and direct transfer of LPG subsidy to beneficiaries.
According to the survey, Indian economy appears to have now gone past the economic slowdown, persistent inflation, elevated fiscal deficit, slackening domestic demand, external account imbalances and oscillating value of the rupee.
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First Published: Feb 27 2015 | 1:57 PM IST

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