While economic growth projections for 2003-04 are fairly close to the targeted rate of 7.3 per cent, a majority of economists feel the Plan estimates for 2004-05 are unlikely to be met. |
In 2004-05, the third year of the Tenth Five Year Plan, the country's gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to grow only 6-6.5 per cent as compared with the Plan target of 8.1 per cent. |
The high base effect of the robust growth experienced in 2003-04 will pull down growth figures in the next fiscal. |
Improved coverage and good agricultural performance would push up economic growth to 7.8 per cent this fiscal, said ICRA Economic Adviser Saumitra Chaudhuri. |
Arvind Virmani, director, ICRIER, predicts 7-7.5 per cent GDP growth in the current fiscal. Crisil Chief Economist Subir Gokarn is also confident of more than 7 per cent growth. |
BB Bhattacharya, going by the annual growth model of the Institute of Economic Growth, projects 6.8-7 per cent growth for 2003-04. |
The farm sector, which grew spectacularly this year because of a good monsoon, will show a dip in growth in the next. |
"Agricultural growth will be less than 3 per cent in 2004-05," said Virmani. On the whole, he expects the economy to clock 6 per cent growth in 2004-05. |
An estimate Bhattacharya agrees with. "Six per cent is reasonable for next year," Bhattacharya said. |
According to Chaudhuri, the 12 per cent growth in trade, hotels, transport and communication in the second half of 2003-04 is partly because of improved coverage. |
This cannot continue in perpetuity, he says. Moreover, the dip in agriculture will send growth figures spiralling downwards next year. |
Virmani, however, said this segment would drive growth in the next fiscal also. |
"Telecom is a big part of high growth in this segment and the growth momentum will be carried to the next year," he says. |
However, it will not be able to pull the economy above the 8 per cent growth targeted in the Plan document. |
Compared with the Tenth Plan target of 6.7 per cent growth in the first year "" 2002-03 "" the actual GDP growth was only 4.3 per cent. |