Indian economy to grow 6.1% in 2023, says IMF

India Economy growth

Washington: Indian economy is expected to grow by 6.1 percent in 2023 predicted in the International Monetary Fund’s latest World Economic Outlook report released Monday and it is slated to account for half of the global growth in 2023, compared to just a tenth coming from the combined might of the US, the world’s largest economy, and Europe, which comprises some of the largest economies.

The growth rate of 6.1 percent which is 0.7 percentage points lower than 6.8 percent in 2022, was earlier projected by the fund in its October forecast. The growth rate will be back at the 2022 level of 6.8 percent in 2024, the fund has further projected, based on “resilient domestic demand despite external headwinds”.

“India remains a bright spot,” Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, an IMF official, wrote in a blog accompanying the World Economic Outlook update, a quarterly report.

“Together with China, it will account for half of the global growth this year, versus just a tenth for the US and euro area combined.”

The phrase “a bright spot” has been used for India’s economic growth for years now by the IMF, the World Bank and other similar bodies, in a nod to its inner resilience against external headwinds and bucking the trend either on the global stage or in the shrunken confine of Asia and South Asia.

India’s projected growth rate of 6.1 percent for 2023 is 0.8 percentage points better than the IMF expectation of 5.3 percent for a category of countries the fund describes as Emerging and Developing Asia. The 2024 match-up is even better, with India expected to get to 6.8 percent while the Asian entity will see a decline to 5.2 percent.

Also Read – Pakistan mosque suicide bombing: Death toll rises to 90

The global economy, however, is in much better shape than how the fund saw it in October. It is projected to fall from an estimated 3.4 percent in 2022 to 2.9 percent in 2023, then rise to 3.1 percent in 2024.

In October, the IMF projected global growth forecast to slow from 6 percent in 2021 to 3.2 percent in 2022 and 2.7 percent in 2023, and had called it the “weakest growth profile since 2001 except for the global financial crisis and the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic and reflects significant slowdowns for the largest economies: a US GDP contraction in the first half of 2022, a euro area contraction in the second half of 2022, and prolonged Covid-19 outbreaks and lockdowns in China with a growing property sector crisis”.

The headwinds for 2023 global economic growth were, as projected by the IMF, “central bank rates to fight inflation and Russia’s war in Ukraine”.

Additionally, the rapid spread of Covid-19 in China dampened growth in 2022, but the recent reopening has paved the way for a faster-than-expected recovery. Global inflation is expected to fall from 8.8 percent in 2022 to 6.6 percent in 2023 and 4.3 percent in 2024, still above pre-pandemic (2017-19).

IANS

Exit mobile version