Why in news?
With reference to World Bank forecast, some headline indicators may be shining, but the recovery is still ragged and vulnerable.
What did the World Bank forecast?
- Growth- The World Bank reduced its 2022 growth projections for South Asian economies to 6.6% from an earlier estimate of 7.6%.
- India’s GDP may now grow by 8% in 2022-23 before dropping further to 7.1% in 2023-24.
- The Bank’s chief economist has said that their overall assessment is that GDP growth could actually be 1.3 percentage points lower, or 7.4%.
- Fiscal deficit- It further noted that even though countries like India and Maldives have seen their overall fiscal deficit fall in 2021 as compared to 2022, deficits are still higher than pre-pandemic levels.
- Imports and Exports- Imports and exports remained the fastest growing sectors in both Q3 and Q4, with higher growth in imports than in export contributing to current account deficits.
- It has emphasised that post-pandemic growth was already uneven and fragile before the Russia-Ukraine conflict triggered fresh challenges.
- The ripple effect of high oil and food prices that prevailed even before the war and were exacerbated since February 24 hitting people’s real incomes.
- The unenthusiastic post-COVID recovery in India’s household consumption will be further restricted by high inflation and incomplete labour market revival.
- India’s recovery varies widely across sectors and manufacturing remains troubled due to weak demand and increasing input costs.
Why do the World Bank’s predictions about India seem more optimistic?
- ADB’s prediction- The Asian Development Bank expects India’s GDP for the year to rise 7.5% with retail inflation of around 5.8%.
- RBI’s view- The RBI reset growth hopes from 7.8% to 7.2%, while raising its inflation projection for the year from 4.5% to 5.7%.
- Inflation- Economists expect inflation to trend much higher, even above 7% in the first half of the year, and well over the comfort threshold of 6% over the full year.

What lies ahead?
- Monetary and fiscal policy mandarins need to address inflation more aggressively.
- There is a need to rethink growth engines as well - RCEP needs a revisit, as advised by key ally Japan.
- The farm sector that has so far been resilient through the pandemic’s worst phases needs careful handling as the cost of inputs is rising sharply.
References
- https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/growth-pangs-the-hindu-editorial-on-world-bank-growth-forecast-for-india/article65321295.ece
- https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/world-bank-cuts-indias-gdp-forecast-to-8-for-fy23-amid-ukraine-crisis/articleshow/90824536.cms