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    Post note ban, IMF cuts India’s growth to 6.6 per cent

    The IMF cut India’s growth rate for the current fiscal year to 6.6 per cent from its previous estimate of 7.6 per cent due to the ‘temporary negative consumption shock’ of demonetisation, days after the World Bank also decelerated India’s growth estimates.

    Post note ban, IMF cuts India’s growth to 6.6 per cent
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    “In India, the growth forecast for the current (2016–17) and next fiscal year were trimmed by one percentage point and 0.4 percentage point, respectively, primarily due to the temporary negative consumption shock induced by cash shortages and payment disruptions associated with the recent currency note withdrawal and exchange initiative,” the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) update released on Monday. 

    The IMF said that after a lacklustre outturn in 2016, economic activity is projected to pick up pace in 2017 and 2018, especially in emerging market and developing economies. The global growth for 2016 is now estimated at 3.1 per cent, in line with the October 2016 forecast. 

    Economic activity in both advanced economies and emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs) is forecast to accelerate in 2017–18, with global growth projected to be 3.4 per cent and 3.6 per cent, respectively, again unchanged from the October forecasts, it said. 

    As per new IMF projections, India’s growth in 2016 is now estimated to be 6.6 per cent as against 7.6 per cent earlier forecast. In 2017, IMF has projected a growth rate of 7.2 per cent as against its previous forecast of 7.6 per cent. The Indian economy is likely to revive to go back to its previously estimated growth rate of 7.7 per cent in 2018, according to the WEO update. 

    The cut in India’s growth rates comes days after the World Bank decelerated India’s GDP growth for 2016-17 fiscal to 7 per cent from its previous estimate of 7.6 per cent citing the impact of demonetisation. But forecast issued on January 11 said that India would regain momentum in the following years with a growth of 7.6 per cent and 7.8 per cent due to a reform initiative.

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