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 Govt lowers growth projection for current fiscal to 5.7%
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					
The government on Monday, lowered the growth projection for the  current financial year to 5.7-5.9 per cent from 7.6 per cent estimated  earlier, while pitching for supportive monetary and fiscal policies to  improve investor confidence. “Given …an emerging scenario, it should be possible for the economy  to improve the overall growth rate of GDP to around 5.7 per cent to 5.9  per cent for the year 2012-13”, said the Mid-Year Economic Analysis  tabled in Parliament.
 The economy, it added, would have to record a growth rate of 6 per  cent in second half of the current financial year to reach the desired  growth rate. It grew by 5.4 per cent during April-September 2012-13.
 The Economic Survey had pegged the growth rate at 7.6 per cent for this fiscal.
 To achieve 5.7-5.9 per cent growth, the Analysis said, “both fiscal  and monetary policy, however, would need to be supportive to sustain  investor confidence. The government will also have to address the  concerns relating to structural supply side bottlenecks“.
 The economic growth rate during 2011-12 had slipped to the nine-year  low of 6.5 per cent due to both domestic and global factors.
 Earlier RBI had lowered the growth rate to 5.8 per cent for 2012-13.
 Referring to inflation, it said, further moderation in price rise is likely to commence from the fourth quarter of the fiscal.
 “Inflation at the end of March 2013 is expected to moderate to 6.8-7 per cent level”, it said.
 As regards fiscal deficit, the Analysis said, the government would  endeavour to restrict it to 5.3 per cent of GDP as against 5.1 per cent  envisaged in the budget.
 The Analysis said there “are reasons to believe” that the slowdown  has bottomed out and the economy is headed towards higher growth in the  second half of the fiscal.
 It said agriculture is expected to improve because of better  prospects with rabi crops benefiting from greater moisture content in  the soil and dominance of irrigated wheat and rice crops.
 The document further said that most services, particularly the trade,  transport, communication and financial services, being largely driven  by the performance of real sectors will also have a better growth.
 The Parliament was informed that a fiscal consolidation road map  announced by the government on October 29 has “considerably improved  business expectations and perception of the domestic and global  investors“.
 Referring to trade deficit, the document said it is expected that the  gap in the current year would not be significantly higher than what it  was last year.
 “Consequently, it is reasonable to expect that the current account  deficit as a ratio of GDP would be lower than what it was in 2011-12,”  the Analysis added.
More stills
Keywords:The government, growth projection,  current financial , monetary , fiscal policies ,investor confidence,GDP , Analysis ,agriculture ,rabi crops, moisture content ,wheat , rice crops, Parliament ,  business , global  investors,business news
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
		
		
		
	
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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