Give yourself a pat on the back if you know the correct answer to any one of the following questions about the Indian economy and can support it with official data: What is the accurate current inflation rate? Is there an ongoing rotation in the economic growth drivers from consumption to investment? The list goes on. |
If you don't, try another approach: give yourself another pat on the back if you know anyone who does. Several policy makers and analysts will be able to give you guesstimates at best. |
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The Indian economy is undergoing significant changes and is becoming more integrated with the rest of the world. However, our economic data are woefully inadequate in giving high-frequency mappings of the evolving economic trends. This deficiency needs to be urgently addressed if policymakers expect to make decisions about the best policy mix need for the economy. |
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Here are a few suggestions to improve just the basic monthly data needs that are available in countries poorer than India and with much less economic technical capability. |
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Quarterly GDP by expenditure: The Central Statistical Organisation (CSO) announces annual GDP by expenditure with a lag of one year. It does not announce any quarterly data for expenditure GDP, indicating that policymakers are flying in the dark about what has happened to the demand-side drivers of expenditure GDP in the past few quarters. |
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Inflation indicators: All relevant parties know the weekly Wholesale Price Index is seriously flawed in how it is updated while significant portions of the underlying items are not updated for a long time for reasons other than that they are administratively controlled. A faulty indicator on a weekly frequency only adds more noise than signalling the underlying trends. Beyond this, the government should consider announcing a decent consumer price (CPI) index. |
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International trade: The government deserves credit for now reporting the monthly international trade data with a much smaller lag. However, the monthly trade profile by country and by product is still announced with a significant lag of several months. The most mind-boggling issue with the monthly international trade data is that the year-to-date data on exports and imports include revisions to previously announced data, but the revised monthly data are not reported! |
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Bank lending by sectors: As financial intermediation improves and credit-to-GDP ratio increases, it is important for policy makers and market economists to have a good understanding of the evolving credit trends. It is not as if banks don't have data on who they are lending to that cannot be summarised on a monthly basis. |
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Other than, perhaps, Delhites, drivers of improved and faster cars need better dashboard indicators for safe maneuvering of their vehicles. However, the current range of indicators for high-frequency tracking of India's economic trends is limited, and what are available generally suffer from significant shortcomings. Let us address the shortcomings before we are caught in an accident. |
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Rajeev Malik is vice-president and senior economist at JPMorgan Chase Bank, Singapore. Views expressed here are personal. |
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