GDP to be lower at 6.5% in FY17; rebound next fiscal: Survey
Team Udayavani, Jan 31, 2017, 2:22 PM IST
New Delhi: India’s economic growth has been pegged at 6.5 per cent for the current fiscal, down from 7.6 per cent recorded in the last financial year, but is expected to rebound in the range of 6.75-7.5 per cent in 2017-18.
The Economic Survey for 2016-17, tabled in the Parliament by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today, underlined the need for more reforms.
The Survey’s GDP growth figure for the current fiscal is lower than 7.1 per cent the Central Statistics Office had forecast earlier this month.
The Survey lists some of the challenges that might impede India’s progress. These include ambivalence about property rights and the private sector, deficiencies in state capacity, especially in delivering essential services and inefficient redistribution.
The Survey highlights difficulties in privatising public enterprises, even for firms where economists have made strong arguments that they should be in the private sector.
In this context, it pointed towards the need to further privatise civil aviation, banking and fertiliser sectors.
The Survey stated that the capacity of the state in delivering essential services such as health and education is weak due to low capacity, with high levels of corruption, clientelism, rules and red tape.
At the level of states, competitive populism is more in evidence than competitive service delivery, it added.
Constraints to policy making due to strict adherence to rules and abundant caution in bureaucratic decision-making favours status quo, it cautioned.
According to the Survey, redistribution by the government is far from efficient in targeting the poor. This is intrinsic to current programmes because spending is likely to be greatest in states with better institutions and which will therefore have fewer poor.
It noted that over the past two years, the government has made considerable progress towards reducing subsidies, especially related to petroleum products.
Technology has been the main instrument for addressing the leakage problem and the pilots for direct benefit transfer in fertiliser represent a very important new direction in this regard, it said.
Noting that India has come a long way in terms of economic performance and reforms, the survey said there is still a journey ahead to achieve dynamism and social justice and completing this journey will require broader societal shifts in the underlying vision.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Choose correct ITR to report foreign assets; 2 lakh such returns filed: CBDT official
Air India Express increases flight operations from northeast destinations
Mcap of 8 of top-10 most-valued domestic firms jumps Rs 1.55 lakh cr; HDFC Bank, TCS sparkle
Myntra pilots foray into quick commerce with ‘M-Now’ in select locations of Bengaluru
Never entered into pact to operate airport in Kenya: Adani
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
No one has right to break law: BJP on Sambhal violence
Ullal: Auto-rickshaw accident near Konaje claims driver’s life
Congress victory in bypolls not a clean chit to CM in MUDA case: R Ashoka
IPL 2025 | Got someone who can do captaincy job: Ricky Ponting on Shreyas Iyer
Will review INDI alliance’s dismal performance in Maharashtra, says Tejashwi Yadav
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.