कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

Gauging growth right

Financial Express Kolkata

|

October 07, 2025

IF GROWTH IS CONSUMPTION-LED, INFORMAL, OR PROPPED UP BY GOVT SPENDING, ITS DURABILITY IS IN QUESTION

- M MUNEER

IN 2015, INDIA changed its GDP base year (from 2004-05 to 201112) and made other methodology shifts, like using more corporate sector data via MCA-21, greater reliance on formal rather than informal sector output, measuring GDP at market prices (including indirect taxes) rather than factor costs, etc. These changes introduced several problems.

Corporate bias and weak informal sector representation: Since many households, small enterprises, informal workshops, etc. do not file audited accounts, many estimates rely on proxies. The informal sector, which employs more than 80% of the workforce, is hard to measure well; shifting away from industrial production-based surveys (Index of Industrial Production, Annual Survey of Industries) in favour of corporate databases may underweigh small firms.

Single deflation vs double deflation: India primarily uses a single deflator (broad price index) rather than separately adjusting input costs and output prices per sector. This matters especially when input costs rise steeply (oil, metals) but output price inflation lags; real growth may be overstated.

Weak correlation with real indicators: Arvind Subramanian's Harvard paper showed that post-2011, growth rates began diverging from basic metrics like electricity consumption, two-wheeler sales, passenger traffic, industrial output, etc. These indicators did not support the high growth rates claimed. Subramanian estimated that growth was overestimated by over 2.5 percentage points for FY12 to FY17-turning“7% average growth"into something nearer 4.5%.

Timeliness, classification and data gap issues: Delays in surveys, misclassifications, untraceable firms in the MCA (ministry of corporate affairs) database, and infrequent updates of key data (e.g. large sample households) introduce error and uncertainty.

Financial Express Kolkata से और कहानियाँ

Financial Express Kolkata

Scientists find oldest poison residues on 60,000-year-old arrows

The poison hints at how far back in history humans have been using it for survival

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Exxon calls Venezuela ‘uninvestable’

AWAITING GUARANTEES

time to read

1 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Aus, India to join G7 meet on critical minerals

US TREASURY SECRETARY Scott Bessent said Australia, India, and several other countries would join a meeting of finance ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) advanced economies that he is hosting in Washington on Monday to discuss critical minerals.

time to read

1 min

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Trump urges US giants to fix Venezuela's oil sector

ASKS FOR $100-BN INVESTMENT

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

737-Max 10 in 2nd phase of testing

THE FEDERAL AVIATION Administration has approved Boeing’s largest variant of its bestselling 737 MAX jet, the MAX 10, to move to the second phase of flight testing on the plane’s long-delayed certification campaign, according to a source familiar with the programme.

time to read

1 min

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Art & science of storytelling

How to channel ideas that engage audiences

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Greenland’s party leaders dismiss US control proposal

GREENLAND'S PARTY LEADERS have rejected President Donald Trump’s repeated calls for the US to take control of the island, saying that Greenland’s future must be decided by its people.

time to read

1 min

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

The role of language in shaping identity

China’s new gender-neutral pronoun is part of a global linguistic shift

time to read

3 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Indian football needs to get house in order first

BE CAREFUL WHAT you wish for, you might just get it.

time to read

4 mins

January 11, 2026

Financial Express Kolkata

Iran declares ‘red line’ on security as Tehran seeks to quell unrest

IRAN'S REVOLUTIONARY GUARDS warned on Saturday that safeguarding security was a “red line” and the military vowed to protect public property, as the clerical establishment stepped up efforts to quell the most widespread protests in years.

time to read

1 min

January 11, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size