GDP growth is reverting to its earlier high growth trajectory led by broad-based growth
momentum. Services sector growth and enhanced agricultural output supported the
strengthening of the growth process. Industrial growth was robust, albeit with greater volatility.
With both services sector and agriculture performing well, sustainability of growth requires
continued buoyancy in the industrial sector. Robust growth has coincided with growing sectoral
imbalances, particularly in some items where demand is growing faster than capacity, thereby
exerting pressure on inflation. For high growth to coexist with a low inflation regime, structural
policy measures to limit the magnitude of imbalances would be critical.
As downside risks recede, economy is back
on the high growth trajectory
I.1 With 8.9 per cent growth in the first half
of 2010-11, India continues to be one of the
fastest growing economies in the world. The
uncertainty about the durability of the robust
growth seen in Q1 of 2010-11 waned
significantly with the momentum continuing in
Q2. Notwithstanding the impact of a lower base,
the first half GDP growth suggests return to the
high growth path (Table I.1). The robust growth
momentum in Q2 reflected the continued
buoyancy of services sector and further pickup
in agricultural performance due to a normal
South-West monsoon. Industrial growth, though moderated on account of the base effect,
remained on the higher side, but volatile.
Rabi outlook suggests continuation of the
growth momentum in agriculture sector
I.2 Normal rainfall during South-West
monsoon and satisfactory progress of North-
East monsoon (121 per cent of long period
average as on December 31, 2010) have
brightened the prospects of agricultural
performance during 2010-11. While, the area
sown during kharif 2010-11 was 7 per cent
higher than that in last year, the area sown
during rabi season so far (January 14, 2011)
with respect to major rabi crops, namely – wheat and pulses - had surpassed the levels
achieved during the corresponding period of
last year as well as the normal area sown for
the respective crops (Table I.2). Improved
sowing positions due to satisfactory monsoon
along with improved reservoir positions
indicate promising progress for rabi crop.
Table I.1 : Sectoral GDP Growth ( Base : 2004-05 ) |
(Per cent) |
Item |
2008- 09*
|
2009- 10#
|
2009-10 |
2010-11 |
2009- 10
|
2010- 11
|
Q1 |
Q2 |
Q3 |
Q4 |
Q1 |
Q2 |
H1 |
H1 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
1. Agriculture & allied activities |
1.6 |
0.2 |
1.9 |
0.9 |
-1.8 |
0.7 |
2.5 |
4.4 |
1.0 |
3.8 |
2. Industry |
3.1 |
10.4 |
4.6 |
8.5 |
12.3 |
15.1 |
11.7 |
9.0 |
6.5 |
10.3 |
2.1 Mining & quarrying |
1.6 |
10.6 |
8.2 |
10.1 |
9.6 |
14.0 |
8.4 |
8.0 |
9.1 |
8.2 |
2.2 Manufacturing |
3.2 |
10.8 |
3.8 |
8.4 |
13.8 |
16.3 |
13.0 |
9.8 |
6.1 |
11.3 |
2.3 Electricity, gas & water supply |
3.9 |
6.5 |
6.4 |
7.7 |
4.7 |
7.1 |
6.2 |
3.4 |
7.1 |
4.8 |
3. Services |
9.3 |
8.3 |
8.0 |
10.2 |
7.3 |
8.5 |
9.4 |
9.7 |
9.1 |
9.6 |
3.1 Construction |
5.9 |
6.5 |
8.4 |
8.3 |
8.1 |
8.7 |
10.3 |
8.8 |
8.4 |
9.6 |
3.2 Trade, hotels, restaurants, transport & communication, etc. |
7.6 |
9.3 |
5.6 |
8.2 |
10.2 |
12.4 |
10.9 |
12.1 |
6.9 |
11.5 |
3.3 Financing, insurance, real estate & business services |
10.1 |
9.7 |
11.7 |
11.3 |
7.9 |
7.9 |
7.9 |
8.3 |
11.5 |
8.1 |
3.4 Community, social & personal services |
13.9 |
5.6 |
7.6 |
14.0 |
0.8 |
1.6 |
7.9 |
7.3 |
11.0 |
7.6 |
4. GDP at factor cost |
6.7 |
7.4 |
6.3 |
8.7 |
6.5 |
8.6 |
8.9 |
8.9 |
7.5 |
8.9 |
* : Quick Estimates. # : Revised Estimates.
Source: Central Statistics Office. |
I.3 As per the First Advance Estimates for
kharif production, total kharif foodgrain
production during 2010-11 is estimated to be
10.4 per cent higher than the previous year. As
regards rabi crop, based on rainfall pattern,
higher sowing and improved reservoir
positions, production of wheat, rabi pulses
(which accounted for around 70 per cent of the
overall pulses production in 2009-10) and
oilseeds is expected to be higher than the
previous year. The year on year growth over a
very low base, however, masks the stagnation
in per capita availability of food grains. As a
result, strong growth in the agriculture sector and a normal monsoon have not eased the
pressure on food inflation.
Widening demand-supply gaps in some
sectors exerting sustained pressures on
food inflation
I.4 Notwithstanding stronger growth outlook
for the agriculture sector, prices of several
agricultural commodities continue to remain
downward sticky, reflecting structural
imbalances. The Eleventh Plan Document
estimates the demand-supply gap to be around
13.4 per cent in oilseeds, 18.7 per cent in pulses
and around 2.0 per cent in food grains during
2009-101.
I.5 Average growth rate of foodgrains
production, at 1.6 per cent during 1990-2010,
trailed behind the average population growth
of 1.9 per cent. With robust growth, the pace of
increase in per capita disposable income has
far exceeded the rate at which supply is
growing. The per capita net availability of
foodgrains per day has declined from 510 grams
in 1991 to 436 grams in 2008. Supply of major
agricultural crops has not kept pace with
demand on account of lower rate of increase in
yield, inadequate irrigation coverage and
excessive dependence on monsoon.
Table I.2 : Rabi Area Sown |
(Million hectares) |
Crop |
Normal Area |
Sowing* |
2008- 09 |
2009- 10 |
2010- 11 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Wheat |
27.33 |
27.41 |
27.91 |
28.84 |
|
|
|
(1.9) |
(3.3) |
Rice |
4.25 |
1.02 |
1.27 |
0.92 |
|
|
|
(23.9) |
(-27.3) |
Total Coarse Cereals |
6.32 |
6.74 |
6.36 |
5.88 |
|
|
|
(-5.7) |
(-7.4) |
Total Cereals |
37.91 |
35.17 |
35.54 |
35.65 |
|
|
|
(1.0) |
(0.3) |
Total Pulses |
12.02 |
13.46 |
13.69 |
14.53 |
|
|
|
(1.8) |
(6.1) |
Total Foodgrains |
49.93 |
48.62 |
49.23 |
50.18 |
|
|
|
(1.2) |
(1.9) |
Total Oilseeds |
9.98 |
9.10 |
8.73 |
8.94 |
|
|
|
(-4.1) |
(2.4) |
All Crops |
59.91 |
57.73 |
57.96 |
59.12 |
|
|
|
(0.4) |
(2.0) |
* : As on January 14.
Note : Figures in parentheses are percentage change over
previous year.
Source : Ministry of Agriculture, Government of India. |
While low yield and increased cost of
inputs have pushed dairy prices up,
untimely and erratic rainfall affected
supply of onions and vegetables in markets
I.6 Growing population coupled with rising
income levels has altered dietary habits causing
substantial increase in demand for various
agricultural products, particularly pulses and
vegetables as well as other protein-based
products like meat, eggs, milk and fish.
Inadequate response of production to structural
changes in demand pattern continues to fuel
demand-supply mismatch in these products. In
the case of milk, supply side constraints have
put pressure on prices. Also, the rise in input
prices of items such as feedstock, labour and
fuel have contributed to further pressure on
prices. For poultry products like eggs and
chicken, a rise in poultry feed prices resulted
in higher prices. Excess rainfall in various parts
of the country led to damage to crops like onion,
potato and tomato, as well as various fruit items.
The onion crop was affected in Andhra Pradesh
and Karnataka due to cyclonic rainfall in
October 2010 and in other states such as
Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and
Rajasthan due to untimely and erratic rainfall
in November 2010. Pest infestation has also
been a major cause of shortfall in supply of
onions.
Ample food stocks provide food security,
but do not ease pressure on food inflation,
partly due to the nature of items driving
food inflation which lie beyond the ambit
of food security
I.7 Food stocks with public procurement
agencies, though declining in recent months,
continued to remain much higher than their
respective buffer stock norms and food
security reserve requirements. Lower monthly
average procurement of food grains, viz., rice
and wheat (up to January 14, 2011) coupled
with higher monthly average off-take (up to
October 2010) resulted in a decline in food
stocks in recent months. The total stock of food
grains with the Food Corporation of India
(FCI) and other government agencies, which
stood at 60.9 million tonnes on June 1, 2010
came down to 47.3 million tonnes on January
1, 2011 (Chart I.1). The policy on food
management has to focus on better supply management in relation to demand, besides
addressing the structural capacity constraints
in food items.
Industrial growth has been robust, but also
volatile
I.8 The industrial sector recorded a growth
of 9.5 per cent during April-November 2010,
mainly driven by the performance of the
manufacturing and mining sectors (Table I.3).
The growth pattern has, however, been
volatile through the months of the current year
(Chart I.2).
I.9 Growth in electricity generation remained
modest. Acceleration in manufacturing sector
growth was driven by the production of capital
goods and consumer durables. Consumer nondurables
continued to remain subdued, primarily on account of deceleration in growth
of industries such as wheat flour/maida, rice
bran oil, coffee, hair oil, hsl lamps, fluorescent
tubes and rubber foot wear.
|
Table I.3 : Index of Industrial Production : Sectoral and
Use-Based Classification of Industries |
(Per cent) |
Industry Group |
Weight in IIP |
Growth Rate |
Weighted Contribution# |
Apr-Mar 2009-10 |
Apr-Nov |
Apr-Mar 2009-10 |
Apr-Nov |
2009-10 |
2010-11 P |
2009-10 |
2010-11 P |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
Sectoral |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mining |
10.5 |
9.9 |
8.4 |
8.0 |
6.0 |
7.2 |
5.4 |
Manufacturing |
79.4 |
11.0 |
7.5 |
10.0 |
89.4 |
86.5 |
90.8 |
Electricity |
10.2 |
6.0 |
5.7 |
4.5 |
4.6 |
6.3 |
3.9 |
Use-Based |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic Goods |
35.6 |
7.2 |
5.8 |
5.8 |
19.5 |
22.6 |
17.5 |
Capital Goods |
9.3 |
20.9 |
6.6 |
22.5 |
29.4 |
12.8 |
33.7 |
Intermediate Goods |
26.5 |
13.6 |
11.2 |
9.6 |
32.4 |
39.0 |
26.9 |
Consumer Goods (a+b) |
28.7 |
6.2 |
6.1 |
6.8 |
18.7 |
25.5 |
21.9 |
a) Consumer Durables |
5.4 |
24.6 |
20.6 |
21.7 |
17.9 |
21.8 |
20.2 |
b) Consumer Non-durables |
23.3 |
0.4 |
1.2 |
0.7 |
0.9 |
3.7 |
1.7 |
General |
100.0 |
10.5 |
7.4 |
9.5 |
100.0 |
100.0 |
100.0 |
# : Figures may not add up to 100 due to rounding off. P : Provisional.
Source: Central Statistics Office. |
Manufacturing sector growth yet to
become broad-based
I.10 During April-November 2010, despite nine
out of seventeen industries (contributing to about
36 per cent of the weight in the IIP) exhibiting
higher growth than last year, manufacturing
sector growth is yet to become broad-based.
Nearly 73 per cent of the overall growth during the period was contributed by the top five
manufacturing industries, with a combined
weight of 24.6 per cent in IIP (Chart I.3).
Capacity utilisation in core sector remains
broadly unchanged, but robust growth entails
the risk of capacity pressures
I.11 During April-October 2010, capacity
utilisation levels in the infrastructure sector did
not stretch much relative to last year (Table I.4).
The lower capacity utilisation in the cement
sector partly reflects larger capacity addition
relative to demand.
Table I.4 : Capacity Utilisation in
Infrastructure Sector |
(Per cent) |
Sector |
Apr-Oct |
2009-10 |
2010-11 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Finished Steel (SAIL+VSP+ Tata Steel) |
87.7 |
88.9 |
Cement |
80.0 |
75.0 |
Fertilizer |
94.1 |
94.2 |
Refinery Production-Petroleum |
101.3 |
102.7 |
Thermal Power* |
72.9 |
76.2 |
*: Data represent plant load factor and pertain to April-
December.
Source: Capsule Report on Infrastructure Sector Performance
(April 2010-October 2010), Ministry of Statistics and
Programme Implementation, GoI and Central
Electricity Authority. |
I.12 The Order Books, Inventories and
Capacity Utilisation Survey (OBICUS) of the
Reserve Bank indicates that capacity
utilisation increased during Q2 of 2010-11 but
remained below the previous peak (Chart 1.4).
I.13 During the second quarter of 2010-11
employment growth situation improved as
compared with the previous quarter as well
as the corresponding quarter of last year
(Table I.5).
Growth in core infrastructure lags behind
both GDP and industrial sector growth
I.14 The six core industries (26.6 per cent of
the total weight in IIP) recorded a moderate 5 per cent growth during April-November 2010
over that of the preceding year (Chart I.5).
Electricity generation exhibited subdued
growth, primarily due to under performance of
thermal power generation constrained by
negative or very low growth in each type of
fossil fuel, especially coal. Coal production,
which remained subdued during the current
financial year, may continue to fall short of
target on account of increasing sensitivity to
environmental norms.
Services sector, which has the dominant
share in GDP, exhibits sustained momentum
I.15 Led by “trade, hotel, restaurant, transport,
storage and communication” and “financing, insurance, real estate and business services”,
service sector growth during Q2 of 2010-11
showed gradual acceleration over the previous
three quarters. The strong growth of various
lead indicators, including commercial vehicles
production, cell phone connections, air cargo
and passengers handled at domestic and
international terminals during the year so far,
suggest continuation of the recent growth
pattern (Table I.6).
Table I.5 : Changes in Estimated Employment |
(in ’000s) |
Industry/ Group |
Mar 2010 over Dec 2009 |
Jun 2010 over Mar 2010 |
Sep 2010 over Jun 2010 |
Sep 2010 over Sep 2009 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
1. Textiles including apparels |
-119 |
-63 |
245 |
79 |
2. Leather |
0 |
21 |
4 |
34 |
3. Metals |
4 |
45 |
27 |
99 |
4. Automobiles |
29 |
51 |
29 |
115 |
5. Gems and jewellery |
24 |
4 |
4 |
39 |
6. Transport |
-2 |
-21 |
13 |
-12 |
7. IT/BPO |
129 |
129 |
108 |
936 |
8. Handloom/Powerloom |
-5 |
-3 |
6 |
7 |
Overall |
61 |
162 |
435 |
1296 |
Source : Eighth Quarterly Quick Employment Survey, July–September, 2010; Ministry of Labour and Employment, Labour
Bureau, GoI. |
|
Table I.6 : Indicators of Services Sector Activity |
(Growth in Per cent) |
Services Sector Indicators |
2008-09 |
2009-10 |
Apr-Oct 2009-10 |
Apr-Oct 2010-11 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Tourist arrivals $ |
-3.3 |
3.5 |
0.2 |
8.5 |
Commercial vehicles production $ |
-24 |
35.9 |
15.1 |
41.3 |
Cement* |
7.2 |
10.5 |
11 |
4.1 |
Steel* |
1.6 |
4.9 |
2.9 |
6.9 |
Railway revenue earning freight traffic $ |
4.9 |
6.6 |
8.8 |
7.7 |
Cell phone connections |
80.9 |
47.3 |
49.5 |
26.6 |
Cargo handled at major ports |
2.2 |
5.7 |
3.6 |
1.7 |
Civil aviation |
|
|
|
|
Export cargo handled |
3.4 |
10.4 |
5.2 |
20.5 |
Import cargo handled |
-5.7 |
7.9 |
-6.9 |
27.4 |
Passengers handled at international terminals |
3.8 |
5.7 |
2.7 |
12.7 |
Passengers handled at domestic terminals |
-12.1 |
14.5 |
8.7 |
14.8 |
$ : Data pertains to April-December.
* : Data pertains to April-November.
Source: Ministry of Tourism; Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation and SIAM. |
For growth momentum to become sustainable,
risks to inflation from structural imbalances
needs priority attention
I.16 The improved kharif production thus far,
favourable prospects for rabi production on
account of the satisfactory progress of the North-
East monsoon and the resultant increase in area
coverage under rabi crop in 2010-11 would,
going forward, sustain the growth momentum
of the agriculture sector. Serious disruptions to
supply of agricultural products due to temporary
as well as structural shocks call for immediate
focus on removal of bottlenecks, minimisation
of post-harvest losses, reduction in transaction
costs, improvement in cold storage and
warehouse facilities and promotion of
coordinated supply chains. Services sector
growth momentum could continue, as reflected
by its various lead indicators. Industrial
production, however, is expected to moderate
on account of the base effect. The deceleration
in the growth of core infrastructure during
November 2010 and slowdown in
Manufacturing PMI during December 2010
indicate uncertainty about the course of IIP
growth in the near term. Downside risks to
growth from global uncertainty and increase in
oil and commodity prices remain, though a major
disruption to growth from these risks appears
unlikely.
1Report of the Working Group for the Eleventh Five Year Plan (2007-12) on Crop Husbandry, Agricultural Inputs, Demand and
Supply Projections and Agricultural Statistics. Supply pertains to actual domestic production based on Fourth Advance Estimates,
while demand estimates in case of oilseeds is based on normative approach, and as regard pulses and foodgrains, the estimates are
based on behavioural approach. |