The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 13, 2025
Today: April 13, 2025

India's economy slows sharply, adding pressure on central bank to cut rates

People buy tomatoes from a vendor at a vegetable market in Ahmedabad
November 29, 2024

By Manoj Kumar and Shivangi Acharya

NEW DELHI (Reuters) -India's economic growth slowed much more than expected in the third quarter, hampered by weaker expansions in manufacturing and consumption, likely adding pressure on the central bank for interest rate cuts.

Gross domestic output in the world's fifth-biggest economy rose by 5.4% in July-September year-on-year, data showed on Friday, the slowest pace in seven quarters and below a Reuters poll of 6.5%. In the previous quarter it grew 6.7%.

India's economy slows sharply, adding pressure on central bank to cut rates
FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: A labourer works inside a steel factory on the outskirts of Jammu

The gross value added (GVA), a more stable measure of economic activity, also saw a modest 5.6% growth, easing from a 6.8% increase in the previous quarter.

India's chief economic adviser V. Anantha Nageswaran told reporters the growth figure was disappointing amid a challenging global environment.

"The bulk of the slowdown has been predominantly due to the manufacturing sector ... Some of it is also due to the presence of excess capacity elsewhere and imports dumping in India," he said, highlighting surging imports of cheap steel from China, Japan and South Korea.

The slowdown, visible across a number of sectors, was indeed most pronounced in manufacturing, where year-on-year growth dropped to 2.2% compared with 7% the previous quarter.

"The economy has hit a bump on its post-pandemic recovery path, with a much slower manufacturing sector and mining sector dragging down growth prospects," said Suman Chowdhury, chief economist at Acuite Ratings.

Economists say inflation, now running at around 6%, is biting into demand for goods ranging from soaps to shampoos to cars, particularly in urban areas. Private consumer spending rose 6.0% from a year earlier, compared with 7.4% in the previous quarter.

The slowdown also came despite government spending rising 4.4% year-on-year in July-September, compared with a 0.2% contraction the previous quarter.

Helped by a good monsoon, agricultural output did better, rising 3.5% compared from 2% growth the previous quarter.

The government adviser said that growth prospects were still resilient and that rural demand would remain a supporting factor.

RED FLAGS

Third-quarter corporate earnings had hinted at a slowdown in the country.

More than 50% of the 44 firms in the blue-chip Nifty 50 index that have reported earnings have either missed analysts' estimates or reported results in line with expectations, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Companies like Maruti Suzuki and FMCG giants Nestle India and Hindustan Unilever reported sluggish urban consumption in the September quarter.

Growth in inflation-adjusted wage costs for listed Indian firms - a proxy for the earnings of urban Indians - has remained below 2% for all the three quarters of 2024, well below the 10-year average of 4.4%, data from Citi showed.

Slower earnings growth prompted record foreign outflows of nearly $12 billion from the Indian equity markets in October.

PRESSURE ON RBI

Bond yields and overnight index swap rates, seen as an indicator of interest rates, fell after the GDP release, signalling an increased probability of an interest rate cut in February.

A few economists, however, said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may even consider a rate cut in December.

"Post today's (GDP) print, there is a high probability of an RBI rate cut in December," said Gaura Sen Gupta, economist at Mumbai-based IDFC First Bank.

India's finance and trade ministers have called for lower interest rates to help industries to ramp up investments and build capacities, although Nageswaran kept his council when speaking to reporters.

"All of us see the data, the central bank is also seeing the data. They know what to do and I will be not commenting on this question," the government's chief economic adviser said.

The RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) left its benchmark repo rate unchanged at 6.50% last month due to still high inflation, while tweaking its policy stance to "neutral".

The bank, which last cut rates in May 2020, announces its next policy decision on Dec. 6.

(Reporting by Manoj Kumar and Aftab Ahmed; Editing by Susan Fenton and Hugh Lawson)

Related Articles

Another inflation report underlines the strength of the US economy before Trumpโ€™s tariff chaos China's Q1 GDP growth set to slow to 5.1%, as Trump 2.0 raises heat on policymakers - Reuters poll Growth risks to nudge India central bank towards deeper rate cuts, economists say Fed's Collins sees steady Fed as tariffs push up inflation risks

Related

Business|Economy|Education|Finance|Political

Brazil's inflation index posts largest monthly rise since early 2022

Business|Economy|MidEast|Political|World

Wars dent Israel's economy in 2024 but military spending keeps growth at 1%

Americas|Economy|Political

Argentina and the IMF: a troubled history

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

Fed's Williams says tariffs will push up inflation, unemployment

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Fed's Collins tells Yahoo Finance that markets are holding in for now

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

US consumer sentiment, inflation expectations deteriorate sharply in April

Local

News|Local

Southern California Edison announces plan to underground power lines

News|Local

Disney to leave historic Fox Studio Lot, ending legacy

News|Local

Palisades Recreation Center to be rebuilt

Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

Weezer bassist to play Coachella despite wifeโ€™s arrest

Share This

Popular

Asia|Europe|Science|Technology|World

Jawbone from ancient land bridge reveals a mysterious human ancestor

Jawbone from ancient land bridge reveals a mysterious human ancestor
Asia|Environment|Science

A mysterious ocean glow reported for over 400 years has stumped scientists. A new study could offer clues

A mysterious ocean glow reported for over 400 years has stumped scientists. A new study could offer clues
Asia|Political|Technology|World

Japanese leader says he hopes Osaka expo will help reunite a divided world

Japanese leader says he hopes Osaka expo will help reunite a divided world
Asia|Environment|Sports|Travel|World

Cold winds sweep Beijing, closing key sites, disrupting travel

Cold winds sweep Beijing, closing key sites, disrupting travel

Economy

Business|Economy|Political|Technology|US

Trump administration says it will exclude some electronics from reciprocal tariffs

Trump administration says it will exclude some electronics from reciprocal tariffs
Business|Economy|MidEast|Political|World

Syrian officials plan to attend IMF, World Bank meetings in Washington DC, sources say

Syrian officials plan to attend IMF, World Bank meetings in Washington DC, sources say
Business|Economy|Political|US

US appeals court allows layoffs, but not dismantling of consumer watchdog

US appeals court allows layoffs, but not dismantling of consumer watchdog
Economy|Political|Technology|US

Trump spares smartphones, computers, other electronics from China tariffs

Trump spares smartphones, computers, other electronics from China tariffs

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In