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Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

New GDP Series: Why Fiscal Targets and $4 Trillion Goal Get Harder

Why in the News

The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation released the new GDP series with 2022-23 as base year, lowering nominal GDP by about 3 to 4 percent. This affects fiscal deficit ratios, debt calculations and India’s timeline to become a 4 trillion dollar economy.

What Changed in the New GDP Series

  • 2023-24 growth revised down from 9.2% to 7.2%.
  • Nominal GDP for 2025-26 reduced by about 3.3%.
  • Real GDP now calculated using double deflation method.
  • Better data sources such as GST, ASUSE, PLFS integrated.
  • Lower nominal GDP means the economy is slightly smaller in rupee terms than previously estimated.

Impact on Fiscal Deficit

Fiscal deficit is calculated as a percentage of GDP.

1. Current Year Impact

  • 2025-26 fiscal deficit moves from 4.4% to 4.5%.
  • Past years’ ratios also rise slightly due to smaller GDP base.

2. FY27 Target Problem

  • Target: 4.3% of GDP
    Absolute deficit: Rs 16.96 lakh crore
  • To achieve this ratio:
    • Nominal GDP must grow 13 to 14% next year.
    • Budget assumption was only 10% nominal growth.
  • This implies either: Higher growth, or Lower borrowing, or Expenditure compression.

Impact on Debt to GDP Ratio

  • Debt ratio projected to rise to about 58% in 2025-26.
  • Target is 55.6%.
  • Lower GDP denominator pushes ratio upward.
  • New GDP series makes fiscal consolidation slightly tougher mathematically.

Impact on $4 Trillion Economy Goal

  • At exchange rate of about Rs 90.98 per dollar: 2025-26 GDP is around 3.8 trillion dollars.
  • If nominal growth is 10% and rupee remains stable: India can cross 4 trillion dollars in 2026-27.
  • However:
    • Rupee depreciation can delay milestone.
    • Dollar GDP depends on both growth and exchange rate.
  • Nigeria example shows how currency depreciation can shrink dollar GDP even if domestic output rises.

Broader Implications

  • Ratios worsen even without policy slippage.
  • Government may need borrowing recalibration.
  • Fiscal arithmetic becomes tighter.
  • Market expectations on growth become crucial.

Prelims Pointers

  • GDP can be measured by production, income and expenditure methods.
  • Nominal GDP uses current prices.
  • Real GDP adjusts for inflation.
  • Fiscal deficit equals total expenditure minus total receipts excluding borrowings.
  • Debt to GDP ratio indicates sustainability of public debt.
[2015] With reference to Indian economy, consider the following statements: 

  1. The rate of growth of Real Gross Domestic product has steadily increased in the last decade. 
  2. The Gross Domestic product at market prices (in rupees) has steadily increased in the last decade. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

(a) 1 only  (b) 2 only  (c) Both 1 and 2  (d) Neither 1 nor 2

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