S&P revises India's FY21 GDP contraction forecast to 7.7% from 9% earlier

The US-based rating agency said its revision in growth forecast reflects a faster-than-expected recovery in the quarter through September. For the next fiscal, it projected India's growth to rebound to 10 percent.

S&P Global Ratings on Thursday raised India's growth forecast to (-) 7.7 percent for the current fiscal, from its earlier estimate of (-) 9 percent on the back of rising demand and falling COVID infection rates. The rating agency sees India's growth rebounding to 10 percent in the next fiscal (FY22).

S&P said India is learning to live with the virus, even though the pandemic is far from defeated and reported cases have fallen by more than half from peak levels, to about 40,000 per day. The feared resurgence following the recent holiday season has yet to materialise.

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The US-based rating agency said its revision in growth forecast reflects a faster-than-expected recovery in the quarter through September. For the next fiscal, it projected India's growth to rebound to 10 percent.
​India's GDP fell 7.5 percent in the July-September quarter, against a contraction of 23.9 percent in the April-June quarter.

"It is no surprise that India is following the path of most economies across Asia-Pacific in experiencing a faster-than-expected recovery in manufacturing production," S&P Global Ratings Asia-Pacific chief economist Shaun Roache said.

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Manufacturing output was about 3.5 percent higher in October 2020, compared to the year-ago period, while the output of consumer durables rose by almost 18 percent.

"This recovery underscores one of the more striking aspects of the COVID-19 shock- the resilience of manufacturing supply chains. Again, as with demand, some slowing of output momentum has emerged more recently," S&P said.
Earlier this week, Fitch had revised its growth forecast for India to (-) 9.4 percent, from (-) 10.5 percent on signs of economic revival.

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