Palash Biswas On Unique Identity No1.mpg

Unique Identity No2

Please send the LINK to your Addresslist and send me every update, event, development,documents and FEEDBACK . just mail to palashbiswaskl@gmail.com

Website templates

Zia clarifies his timing of declaration of independence

What Mujib Said

Jyoti basu is DEAD

Jyoti Basu: The pragmatist

Dr.B.R. Ambedkar

Memories of Another Day

Memories of Another Day
While my Parents Pulin Babu and basanti Devi were living

"The Day India Burned"--A Documentary On Partition Part-1/9

Partition

Partition of India - refugees displaced by the partition

Friday, January 8, 2010

Re: Growth on firmer footing



On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 12:07 PM, Indicus Analytics <indic@indicus.net> wrote:

The Emerging Economy - Monthly Newsletter from Indicus Analytics

January 2010
Indian Economy Next Quarter
 
  • Future growth on much firmer footing – across manufacturing, services and agriculture sectors

  • But corporate hiring and investment to stay flat for another quarter

  • Tax collections - Boost in advance tax but indirect tax collections much lower than expected

  • Good rabi output expected, of course, if weather holds up

  • Inflation concerns will reflect in small increase in CRR and rate hikes by RBI this month

India: Kal, aaj aur kal

With the worst of the economic crisis behind us, we look ahead to forecast trends for the decade ahead – growth is set to be much faster than the last ten years. The driving force of the decade? Transport, storage and communications - a large road network is going to be operational, ports are rapidly improving, air transport infrastructure is being overhauled, and most important, a strong ecosystem has been created for the telecom sector.

The mainstay of the Indian economy for so many decades, agriculture could well grow faster than the expected 3.4% - a rural road network has been built up, high agri commodity prices would improve terms of trade towards this sector, rural human capital has improved tremendously in the 2000s, new technologies are about to enter on a mass scale, agri reforms such as the APMC acts are being overhauled. Though it is difficult, to time the tipping point, in Indian agriculture – we would expect it to be somewhere after the middle of the decade though we may need to wait till the 2020s for the full impact of these changes to be felt.

Rapidly growing domestic and international markets will keep manufacturing opportunities buoyant, but there would be spoilers in the shape of energy, wage price inflation, the unresolved labour and land issues.

Bottom-line? Overall GDP growth will be around 9.6% annually, even if the government does not do anything radically different. It would be higher if agriculture and electricity, gas and water supply are able to break through their long term institutional constraints. It would be lower if inflation eats into macro-economic stability and law and order conditions get out of hand.

This does translate into greater per capita income and changed households budgets. Here again, transport, education, health and recreation would all be among the most rapidly growing items of consumer expenditures. The tipping point is not so much in health or education in the aggregate, but in goods and services that promise better lifestyles.

Despite such a rosy scenario, India will not rid itself of poverty - almost 200 million persons are likely to remain extremely poor by the end of the decade. Social safety nets would continue to be critical – the impact of these on the fisc can be minimised if governance and institutional change remove inefficiencies in distribution.

Indians remain one of the most optimistic people on the globe, growth prospects are bright even as numerous issues need to be resolved. But the true test of success would be when the energy in entrepreneurs and consumers brings us a greener, more equitable decade.

P.S A more detailed explanation of these forecasts and trends, with graphs was published in the Indian Express, available now on our website.

Sumita Kale & Laveesh Bhandari
5th January 2010, Indicus Analytics
 

Sumita Kale is Chief Economist, and Laveesh Bhandari is Director, Indicus Analytics. They can be contacted at sumita@indicus.net and laveesh@indicus.net.

Click below to know more >>

 
Indicus In The Media

Indicus IE Happy New Decade, India!

Strength in numbers

FE Person of the year – the rural consumer

Young and going it alone

The urban consumer – putting numbers to gut feel

The economic case for creating smaller states

Homing in on class A households

A developmental case for statehood

Worst may be over on food price front

Protect manufacturers from inflation – PMEAC

Understanding the Indian consumer

Premium Data Products
 
Indian Financial Scape
provides information on Financial services availabilty, market size, incomes, demography, asset penetration, credit, savings…
and more
------------------------------------
Market Skyline of India
Income distribution - low, middle, and affluent, Market size across product segments, SEC classification…
and more
------------------------------------
District GDP of India
All 9 sectors share of district GDP, Sectoral growth in each district, Accompanied with basic
and more
------------------------------------
Housing Skyline of India
Ownership across income/age ,Forecast of housing demand,Insights into household types…
and more
------------------------------------
City Skyline of India
Income distribution, savings and expenditures, index of best cities to invest and live in…
and more
------------------------------------
City Skyline of India Neighborhood Series
Incomes, expenditures and savings in 100 plus neighbourhoods of top
and more
------------------------------------
Indian Development Landscape  
Education, Health, Economic Status, Infrastructure, Demography, Empowerment, crime…
and more
 
------------------------------------  
Indicus Consumer Spectrum  

33 urban Consumer Segments in India based on lifescycle stages of chief wage earners of households and their skill levels...                          and more

 
------------------------------------  
Industrial Skyline of India  
60 Industrial Sectors - units engaged, production, employment and  consumption of industrial products in states and districts                          and more  
------------------------------------  

  
   
Send to a Friend Preferences Unsubscribe


 




--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/

No comments:

Post a Comment