EFM Project - Group9 - 231019 - 003016
EFM Project - Group9 - 231019 - 003016
Project Report
on
Submitted By:
Group – IX
Abstract
As a preventive step against the COVID-19 pandemic in India, the Government of India
imposed a state-wide lockdown for 21 days on the evening of March 24, 2020, preventing
mobility of the whole 1.38 billion (138 crore) population of India. The lockdown which was
imposed as a short term measure had to be continued in phases over next two years,
impacting the Indian economy adversely. In view of the deficiencies and restricted
admittance to present-day work and items, private usage fell strongly because of forced
lockdown in many states. Families were seriously impacted during the pandemic. India being
a net transporter, suffered strongly as a result of trade limits during the pandemic. Freight and
trade limitations were reflected in the costs. India needed to import more than it did before
the scourge in light of the lower cross-country financial stream, which brought about an
emotional drop in generally speaking creation levels. The significant reduction in GDP was
the most severe in the country's history, and it's possible that this understates the financial
devastation suffered by the poorest people. An analysis of the changing national income and
forecast of the future will help in better understanding of the macroeconomic problem
triggered by unprecedented circumstances.
Introduction
The objective of this report is to derive an estimate of GDP reduction, in comparison with
pre-lockdown times 2011-2020 March and post lock down times. Cases of COVID-19
pandemic were reported in India towards the end of January 2020. In mid-March, economic
activity was disrupted in various states, including some metropolitan areas and from March
25, a large-scale nationwide lockdown was imposed in the interest of the country. Evidence
from other countries indicated that a lockdown was needed to control the Pandemic. This
resulted in a significant drop in the GDP. Science and the media have a lot of speculation
about the magnitude of contraction of GDP.
This empirical study is based on an estimate using the expenditure method of the “National
Income Accounting Framework”. A comparison of expenditure under normal circumstance to
that during the lockdown and post Covid has been examined. GDP reduction is estimated to
be between 58.08 percent and 66.78 percent, according to our calculations. However, this
projection should not be confused with the Indian economy's growth forecast. It is simply an
estimation of the decline and advance in the GDP during Covid and post Covid based on the
prediction and data. The Indian economy declined by 7.3 percent in the April-June quarter of
fiscal year 2020-21. According to official figures issued by the ministry of statistics and pro-
gramme implementation, this is the steepest drop since the government began recording GDP
statistics quarterly in 1996. After the lockdown was imposed in 2020, an estimated 10 million
migrant workers returned to their home states. It is large in size, yet not out of the ordinary
when compared to other countries. “INSEE (2020) reported a 35% drop in French GDP” in
the first month of the lockdown in a similar analysis for France. For a research published for
McKinsey & Company, “Gupta et al (2020) anticipated a drop of 43 percent to 51 percent”,
among other studies on India. According to CRISIL (2020), “41 percent of GDP is at risk,
with a reduced rate of growth of 1.8 percent for the fiscal year 2020-21”. Other institutions
predicted lower annual GDP growth rates, such as “-5.2 percent as per Nomura, -0.4 percent
as per Goldman Sachs, 0 percent by Moody's, 1.5 percent to 4% by the World Bank, 2.1 per-
cent by the Economic Intelligence Unit and 1.8 percent by the Asian Development Bank”.
S&P recently lowered the Indian economy's growth rate to -5%, while the RBI raised it to
5%. Under these circumstances, the recovery is projected to be slow. In the post-
independence period, India’s national income had declined only four times before 2020 – in
1958, 1966, 1973 and 1980 – with the largest drop in 1980 (5.2%). This means that 2020-21
is the worst year in terms of economic contraction in the country’s history, and much worse
than the overall contraction in the world (Figure 1).
Reduced labour supply adversely affected both “demand and supply in the products market
and increased transaction costs for both demand and supply” the main avenues via which the
pandemic's negative consequences operate. These effects take three months to a year or
longer to manifest. In its spring 2020 projection, “the European Commission (2020) predicted
a deep and uneven recession (across Europe), with a 7.7% drop in Euro area GDP and a
global deep of 3.5 percent”. It also anticipates a shaky recovery. Among other significant
research, For China, the “OECD (2020a) expected a 0.5 percent to 1.5 percent drop in GDP
relative to baseline and the OECD (2020b) predicted a 2-percentage point drop per month of
confinement, while the CPB (2020) predicted a 1.2 percent to 7.7% drop compared to the
previous year”. The Netherlands, German Council of Economic Experts (2020) forecasted a
“2.8 percent to 5.4 percent drop in German GDP”, while Morgan Stanley predicted a 3% drop
in US GDP. The World Trade Organization (WTO) has divided the ways of estimating the
decline in economic activity into two groups, namely calculation type studies, such as those
conducted by IFO and observation type studies (2020), INSEE (2020) and the OECD (2020a,
202b), as well as studies based on economic forecasting models, such as CPB (2020),
McKibbin, and Fernando (2020). Our method is similar to calculation type, in which it
calculates the decline in GDP due to sector-specific declines. We used the demand side of
national income accounting, i.e. the expenditure side.
GDP or Y = C + I + G + NX
Where,
C = Consumption: The term "consumption" indicates how much money a family spends on
various goods and services, non-durables (such as food and clothing), durables (such as
vehicles and refrigerators) and services of goods (such as haircut, education and medical
care). Due to the imposition of lockdown in the country personal consumption fell sharply it
contracted 3.9% in the year 2020 (post lockdown) as compared to 2.4% expansion in year
2019 (pre-lockdown).
I = Investment: Capital goods are purchased for the purpose of producing mostly consumer
items in the economy and are referred to as investment although, in reality, machines are also
used to make machines. It's worth noting right away that investment does not include stock
and bond purchases, which simply redistribute existing assets among different people.
Investment contracted by around 20 lakh crores in post lockdown times and came to around
3076722 in the last three quarters of 2020, whereas in 2019 it was around 50,12,256(approx).
NX = Net exports: The difference between exports and imports is known as net exports. It is
the gap between the value of products and services exported to other countries versus the
value of goods and services imported from other countries. In the last 4 quarters before 2019
India imported goods of around Rs 490524cr and post lockdown in the last 3 quarters of
2020, India exported goods worth Rs 39726 cr. In those three quarters, for second and third
quarters, India imported minimal amount of products however, during the last quarter India
exported its products as one of the biggest exporter of PPE kits and COVID-19 related goods.
The methodology for calculating the change in GDP and data is presented in Part 2, the
results and comments are presented in Section 3, and the last section concludes.
“Secondary data is information that has previously been published in books, newspapers,
magazines, journals, and other online resources. These sites have a wealth of information
about research topic in business studies, nearly independent of the nature of the topic. As a
result, using a suitable set of criteria to pick secondary data for use in the study is critical in
terms of boosting the research validity and reliability”. We acquired data for this analysis
from a variety of secondary data sources, including scholarly publications, government
websites, and online portals. As a result, the numerous data sources are -
Pulapre Balakrishnan, “Financial stability and the RBI”, The Hindu, October 15, 2019.
Kaushik Basu, “India and the Mistrust Economy”, The New York Times, November 6, 2019.
“India Fiscal Deficit Breaches Target to Hit 4.6% in FY20”, BloombergQuint, May 29, 2020.
“Covid-19: Experts seek income support, cash transfer for those affected”, Business
Standard, June 3, 2020. Pib.gov.in and Estimate of National income published by NSO,
Ministry of Statistics & Programme implementation, Government of India.
https://www.mospi.gov.in/sites/default/files/press_release/PressNoteQ4_FY2022-
23_31may23.pdf
Pandemic Phase
A nationwide lockdown was imposed on 25th March 2020, due to which an entire economy
came to a standstill. People lost their jobs; unprecedented changes in the lifestyle, food
consumption trends, and public health were seen. We saw how consumers shifted their
purchasing and consumption trends from want based to need based. While economies
worldwide suffered a lot due the pandemic, India was among the countries to have seen a
huge contraction (Figure 1). In the post-independence period India had seen decline only four
times before 2020, with the largest drop in 1980 which was approximately 5.2%. Besides
economic meltdown pandemic also brought severe hardships on lives of the people.
Among all components of aggregate demand, consumption and investment contribution were
identified to be the largest. In Q1 of 2019-20,
2019 20, these two accounted for 88.4% in overall share
of GDP and up to 76.6% in Q1 of 2020-21.
2020 21. It is clear that Indian economy is primarily driven
by consumption, followed by investment. As a consequence, the sharp sharp decline in these two
components caused the overall GDP to decline rapidly during the pandemic. Government
consumption expenditure rose up as a fiscal response to the economic slowdown but couldn’t
exceed the targeted fiscal deficit and faced an upper ceiling beyond which it ceased to uplift
the GDP. Net exports will not be able to revive the economy in the short run if all other
factors remain unchanged. High export growth, however, could impact the GDP positively
but is hard to achieve in the long run due to India being a net importer in a significant portion
of preceding periods. Overall, the GDP saw a sharp dip by 23.9% in the quarter most affected
by the first wave of pandemic (figure 2).. Despite India announcing a fiscal stimulus package
of INR 20 lakh crore, the economic slowdown could not be reversed at the desired pace and
could only gradually return to previous levels.
Post-Pandemic Phase
In the period April to June 2020, India’s GDP dropped by a massive 24%. According to the
“national
national income estimates published in May 2021, the economy contracted by a further
7.4% from July to September 2020 and the subsequent recovery in the following six months
was weak,
eak, meaning that the overall rate of contraction in India was (in real terms) 7.3% for
the whole 2020-21
21 financial year”.
year
The Indian economy however, moved on after the pandemic, showing a full recovery in
FY22-23 ahead of many nations. In the financial year 2022-23,, India has also faced the
challenge of reining in inflation. Measures taken by the government and RBI, along with the
easing of global commodity prices, have finally helped to bring retail inflation below the RBI
upper tolerance target in November
November 2022. However, the challenge of the depreciating rupee
persists with the likelihood of further increases in policy rates. The widening of the CAD may
also continue as global commodity prices remain elevated and the growth momentum of the
Indian economymy remains strong. The loss of export stimulus is further possible as the slowing
world growth and trade shrinks the global market size in the second half of the current year.
Despite these, agencies worldwide continue to project India as the fastest-growing
fastest major
economy at 6.5-7.0
7.0 per cent in FY23.
References:-
https://www.economy.com/india/net-exports
https://dea.gov.in/monthly-economic-report-table
https://www.orfonline.org/research/post-pandemic-economic-recovery-seven-priorities-
india/?amp
https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1723153
https://statisticstimes.com/economy/country/india-quarterly-gdp-growth.php
https://statisticstimes.com/economy/country/india-gdp-sectorwise.php
https://www.mospi.gov.in/sites/default/files/press_release/PressNoteQ4_FY2022-
23_31may23.pdf