"Growth is expected to recover in the next financial year. The direction indicated in the Union Budget announced earlier this month is encouraging and will further strengthen the domestic economy. It is extremely critical to push the domestic capex cycle which has been persistently weak," Ficci Secretary General A Didar Singh said.
"We also look forward to a further reduction in lending rates by the banks. This will help boost consumption and prop-up investments through low-cost finance," he added.
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has retained the growth projection for the current fiscal at 7.1 per cent, as projected in the first advance estimates in January.
"Policymakers should take doable steps to revive fixed investments and production of capital goods which are falling continuously since the growth which is being supported by consumption demand does not have a sustainable impact," Assocham President Sandeep Jajodia said.
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The CSO has also marginally revised upwards the GDP estimates for first and second quarters to 7.2 per cent and 7.4 per cent.
The Reserve Bank of India and other agencies like IMF and OECD had lowered GDP projections arguing that the note ban would have short term impact on the Indian economy.