Industrial growth projections for the current fiscal will have to be revisited in the wake of “disappointing” pace of expansion in the factory output, which plunged in July to 3.3 per cent, the Chairman of Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, Dr C. Rangarajan, said today.
“As regards the estimate of industrial production for the year as a whole, we will have to revisit the area after one or two months,” the PMEAC Chairman said, after release of the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).
The dismal factory output growth was on the back of a poor performance by manufacturing, mining and capital goods segments. In fact, the capital goods sector saw a decline of 15.2 per cent, reflecting eroding investor confidence.
Industrial growth was 9.9 per cent in the corresponding month of 2010 and 8.8 per cent in June this year. The data are disappointing on the two scales, year-on-year and the sequential basis.
For the cumulative April-July 2011-12, the drop in growth is sharp at 5.8 per cent against 9.7 per cent a year ago.
“It is a disappointing number. One had expected that industrial production will be slightly higher than this,” Dr Rangarajan said.
In its Economic Outlook, the PMEAC had projected industry to grow 7.1 per cent in the current fiscal. The Government, in February, had pegged it at 8.6 per cent. The IIP had grown 7.8 per cent in 2010-11.
Dr Rangarajan, however, hoped that the industry would put up a better show in the second half of the year.
“At the present moment perhaps the numbers are not encouraging... but if the industrial production does better in the second half, then the overall growth rate may be higher. I will say that we will have to revisit the area after one or two months,” he said.
GDP target
Asked if IIP slowdown may prompt a re-think on the GDP target as well, he said: “While industrial production does not appear to be encouraging and may be lower than what we had originally expected, agriculture may do better.
“And the services sector may still do well and exports are doing well. Therefore, the revision in terms of the GDP growth rate will have to taken in the context of the developments in agriculture, industry and services,” Dr Rangarajan said.
The Finance Ministry may go in for a formal revision in the overall growth projections for the year in the backdrop of the recent global developments and rising cost of borrowing and raw material.
The PMEAC has projected GDP to grow by 8.2 per cent this fiscal.