Economy: India 1, Heatwaves: India

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.<br/>
 
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.<br/>
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[[Category:India|E]]
 
[[Category:Government|E]]
 
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|E]]
 
 
 
 
=India’s economy: the main trends from 1975 to 2017-18=
 
==1975-2015==
 
[[File: economy india.jpg|The Indian economy, 1975-2015: GDP, the rupee exchange rate, exports, fiscal deficit and inflation, [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=28_02_2015_017_005_003&type=P&artUrl=KEEPING-SCORE-THE-WORLD-CUPS-THE-BUDGET-28022015017005&eid=31808 ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
See graphic, 'The Indian economy, 1975-2015: GDP, the rupee exchange rate, exports, fiscal deficit and inflation'
 
==1997-2018: Fiscal Deficit to GDP==
 
[[File: Fiscal Deficit to GDP, 1997-2018.jpg|Fiscal Deficit to GDP, 1990-2018 <br/> This is the size of the government’s debt as a proportion of the overall size of the economy.Data source for this chart: World Bank <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/budget/data-hub  January 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''Fiscal Deficit to GDP, 1990-2018''
 
 
==1997-2018: Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF)==
 
[[File: Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) is an indicator of how much investment activity is happening in the country and a slowdown on this front does not bode well for overall growth and job creation- 1997-2018.jpg|Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) is an indicator of how much investment activity is happening in the country and a slowdown on this front does not bode well for overall growth and job creation- 1997-2018 <br/> Data source for this chart: World Bank <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/budget/data-hub  January 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) is an indicator of how much investment activity is happening in the country and a slowdown on this front does not bode well for overall growth and job creation- 1997-2018''
 
 
==1997-2018: Inflation trend==
 
[[File: Inflation trend, 1997-2018.jpg|Inflation trend, 1997-2018 <br/> This is the rate at which the general level of prices in the economy is rising.Data source for this chart: World Bank <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/budget/data-hub  January 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''Inflation trend, 1997-2018''
 
 
==1997-2018: Unemployment Rate==
 
[[File: Unemployment Rate, 1997-2018.jpg|Unemployment Rate, 1997-2018 <br/> The unemployment rate measures the proportion of people in the labour force looking for a job but unable to find one.Data source for this chart: World Bank <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/budget/data-hub  January 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''Unemployment Rate, 1997-18''
 
 
==2009-18: ₹ vs. $/ GDP/ adding $1 trillion to GDP==
 
[[File: 2009-19- The Indian rupee appreciated twice vis-à-vis the US dollar.jpg| i) 2009-19: The Indian rupee appreciated twice vis-à-vis the US dollar; ii) The number of years that it took China and India to add each $1 trillion to their GDPs/ economies; iii) 2014-18: India’s GDP estimated by three different methods. <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F06%2F18&entity=Ar01905&sk=B965B0C0&mode=image  June 18, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
'' i) 2009-19: The Indian rupee appreciated twice vis-à-vis the US dollar; ii) The number of years that it took China and India to add each $1 trillion to their GDPs/ economies; iii) 2014-18: India’s GDP estimated by three different methods. ''
 
 
==2011/ 13-19==
 
[[File: The Indian economy, 2013-19, Growth rate vis-à-vis the world, Inflation, Growth in loans and advances of NBFCs, Tax to GDP ratio, Items of revenue expenditure, unproductive expenditure.jpg| The Indian economy, 2013-19: <br/> i)Growth rate vis-à-vis the world; <br/> ii) Inflation; <br/> iii) Growth in loans and advances of NBFCs; <br/> iv) Tax to GDP ratio; <br/> v) Items of revenue expenditure, unproductive expenditure <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03206&sk=845AA4D9&mode=image  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
See graphic, ‘ The Indian economy, 2013-19: <br/> i)Growth rate vis-à-vis the world; <br/> ii) Inflation; <br/> iii) Growth in loans and advances of NBFCs; <br/> iv) Tax to GDP ratio; <br/> v) Items of revenue expenditure, unproductive expenditure '
 
 
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:Government|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:India|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
 
=The year-wise position, especially after 2002=
 
 
[[File: New jobs created in India, 2010-16, Sales Growth of corporate India-Nominal and Real, 2002-17, iii) Quarterly growth in Gross Fixed Capital Formation, Jun 2013- Sept 2016.jpg|i) New jobs created in India, 2010-16; <br/> ii) Sales Growth of corporate India-Nominal and Real (%), 2002-17; <br/> iii) Quarterly growth in Gross Fixed Capital Formation (%), Jun 2013- Sept 2016; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=31_01_2017_013_015_010&type=P&artUrl=Economy-not-in-good-shape-say-former-PM-31012017013015&eid=31808 The Times of India], January 31, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
 
==2004- 18==
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F06%2F01&entity=Ar02301&sk=005B4784&mode=text  Better growth prospects in FY19, but oil a risk: Expert, June 1, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
 
 
[[File: The growth of India’s GDP, 2004- 18, 2016-18; sector-wise growth and growth in per capita income.jpg|The growth of India’s GDP, 2004- 18. <br/> 2016-18 <br/> i) Sector-wise growth, and <br/> Growth in per capita income <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F06%2F01&entity=Ar02301&sk=005B4784&mode=text  Better growth prospects in FY19, but oil a risk: Expert, June 1, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
Economists are predicting a further pick-up in activity during the current financial year on the back of higher consumption demand, a stable GST and a surge in investment towards end of the year. But they have identified higher crude oil price and its impact on inflation, current account deficit and overall growth as risk factors that are expected to weigh on RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which meets next week.
 
 
Most economists are predicting a GDP growth rate of 7-7.5%, with a majority closer to the upper end of the band. A few have already lowered their projections, such as Moody’s which cut from 7.5% to 7.3%, citing the impact of crude. But others, including the government, are sticking to their earlier estimates.
 
 
“I don’t think we are revising our estimates or the forecast for the current year, which is about 7.5%. We retain it at that level... there is no one-to-one relation between the oil price growth and the GDP growth. There have been various quarters and years when oil prices have gone up but there has been growth also. So, we at this moment feel that we should retain (the growth estimate),” economic affairs secretary Subhash Chandra Garg told reporters after the GDP numbers were released.
 
 
Economists too are bullish at the moment. “The growth is likely to realise from pick-up in consumption, especially rural consumption, with the forecast of normal monsoon, increased public sector spending and uptick in performance of the manufacturing sector in coming quarters. The manufacturing sector, which witnessed improvement in the last three quarters, is expected to benefit in Q1 of FY19 due to favourable base effect. In addition, investment rate has seen some improvement on the quarterly basis and is expected to maintain the momentum going ahead,” said Madan Sabhnavis, economist at CARE, while forecasting 7.5% growth this fiscal.
 
 
Health of the banking sector will also be crucial. “The ability of public sector banks to support lending growth, the risk of monetary tightening and trade wars, and impact of higher crude oil prices on purchasing power of consumers and corporate earnings have emerged as risks,” said Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA.
 
 
==2004-14 vis-à-vis 2014-18==
 
[[File: The Indian economy in 2004-14 vis-à-vis 2014-18- Consumption, Investment, Credit Growth, Fiscal Deficit, Wholesale Price Inflation, Interest Rates, Current account Deficit, Foreign Exchange Reserves.jpg|The Indian economy in 2004-14 vis-à-vis 2014-18-<br/> i) Consumption, <br/> ii) Investment, <br/> iii)Credit Growth, <br/> iv) Fiscal Deficit, <br/>  v) Wholesale Price Inflation, <br/> vi) Interest Rates, <br/> vii) Current account Deficit, <br/> viii) Foreign Exchange Reserves <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F08%2F23&entity=Ar00603&sk=60D4143E&mode=image  August 23, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''The Indian economy in 2004-14 vis-à-vis 2014-18- Consumption, Investment, Credit Growth, Fiscal Deficit, Wholesale Price Inflation, Interest Rates, Current account Deficit, Foreign Exchange Reserves''
 
 
===2004-14 (and 1988-89, 1994-2003)===
 
[https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/india-clocked-10-08-pc-growth-under-manmohan-singhs-tenure-shows-data/articleshow/65444247.cms  India clocked 10.08 per cent growth under Manmohan Singh's tenure: Report, August 18, 2018: ''The Economic Times'']
 
 
[[File: Estimation of average growth- 1994- 2014.jpg|Estimation of average growth- 1994- 2014 <br/> From: [https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/india-clocked-10-08-pc-growth-under-manmohan-singhs-tenure-shows-data/articleshow/65444247.cms  India clocked 10.08 per cent growth under Manmohan Singh's tenure: Report, August 18, 2018: ''The Economic Times'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
The numbers have been calculated by a committee set up by the National Statistical Commission.
 
 
India’s economic growth numbers, adjusted for the base year of FY12, show that expansion was marginally higher under the new series after the economy picked up pace in FY04 and generally lower in the preceding years.
 
 
The numbers have been calculated by a committee set up by the National Statistical Commission. Former chief statistician Pronab Sen said the exercise was a good start but that more work was needed.
 
 
The report shows real GDP growth touching a high of 10.08% in 2006-07 in terms of factor cost, the highest since liberalisation of the economy in 1991 and the second highest ever, behind 10.2% during the Rajiv Gandhi administration in 1988-89. Under the old series, growth in 2006-07 was 9.57%.
 
 
In terms of market prices, the highest growth was 10.78% in 2010-11.
 
 
The new GDP series with FY12 as the base year was begun in 2015 and follows internationally accepted methods based on market prices as opposed to the factor cost method followed earlier and uses corporate numbers to estimate manufacturing output.
 
 
The committee has issued adjusted numbers for the 1994-2014 period. Average growth in first five-year term of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA-1), FY05-09, goes up under the new series to 8.37% from 8.03% earlier in terms of market prices.
 
 
In terms of factor cost, the increase is from 8.43% to 8.87%. Average growth during the preceding Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance administration is down marginally from 5.89% to 5.73%. In terms of factor cost, the decline was from 6.01% to 5.83%.
 
 
In the first three years of UPA-2 (FY10-12), the average growth rate goes up from 8.46% to 8.86%. In terms of factor cost, the revision is up from 8.06% to 8.49%. Growth data based on the old series is available till FY12 while the revised series is till FY14.
 
 
The Congress party said growth numbers were better under the UPA. “It proves that like-for-like, the economy under both UPA terms (10-year avg: 8.1%) outperformed the Modi Govt (avg 7.3%),” the party’s official handle tweeted. “The UPA also delivered the only instance of double-digit annual growth in modern Indian history.”
 
 
Over the 1994-95 to 2002-03 period, the restated growth under the new series is lower than GDP estimated according to market prices.
 
 
“Growth is higher in the new back series especially for value-added growth,” said Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA. “There is a fairly secular trend after 2003-04.”
 
 
The committee said the deviations were not significant and attributed these to discrepancies.
 
 
“When we look at the growth rates, there are some differences, although not significant and this is largely due to the ‘discrepancy’ variable, which is found to be highly volatile,” it said.
 
 
Former chief statistician Pronab Sen said: “It is a good start but the committee has used some proxies to generate the series so one needs to see how consistent these methods are by themselves.”
 
 
The statistics office has not yet taken a call on the numbers.
 
 
“These are indicative numbers to decide the approach,” said a statistics ministry official. “These will be sent to the advisory committee on national accounts and based on its approval, we will work on sectoral data.”
 
 
Officials of Central Statistics Office were also involved in the recommendations made in the report. NR Bhanumurthy, professor at National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) and member of the committee, said the back series is consistent with the new series and would be helpful for research.
 
 
ONE METHOD The committee has restated the old series using one of the possible three ways--the production shift method. This is different from the method currently followed in compiling GDP data.
 
 
The committee recommended that the other two methods should be also used to calculate the back series and when these numbers become available then “the time series data based on all the three approaches should be compared for their robustness.”
 
 
The CSO has already computed the growth rates of GVA/GDP (gross value added/gross domestic product) estimates from 2004-05 to 2011-12 at current and constant prices using the current methodology. These are tentative estimates that need to be deliberated on by the advisory committee on national accounts, the committee noted in its report, and have not yet been presented.
 
 
===2004-14 vis-à-vis 2014-19===
 
[https://www.livemint.com/politics/policy/manmohan-singh-vs-narendra-modi-the-real-india-gdp-growth-story-1555034270688.html  Vivek Kaul, Manmohan Singh vs Narendra Modi: The real India growth story, April 12, 2019: ''Livemint'']
 
 
 
The quality of India GDP data came into question when GDP growth in FY17 was revised to 8.2%—the highest in any year between FY12 and FY19, despite demonetisation
 
GDP growth under Narendra Modi was faster than under Manmohan Singh. The question, though, is: does this pass the basic smell test?
 
 
The quality of India’s economic data in general, and gross domestic product (GDP) data in particular, has come in for questioning in recent months. Those questions only acquired more urgency in January, when the GDP growth in 2016-17 was revised to 8.2%—the highest in any year between 2011-12 and 2018-19.
 
 
In 2016-17, a large section of the informal economy, which forms a significant portion of the Indian economy, was severely hit by demonetisation. Hence, the question: how did the economy grow at 8.2% during the year?
 
Between 2009-10 and 2013-14, the period during which Manmohan Singh was the prime minister, the Indian economy grew by 6.7% per year. Between 2014-15 and 2018-19, the Indian economy is supposed to have grown at 7.5% per year. Narendra Modi has been prime minister during this period (from 26 May 2014 onwards).
 
 
Hence, the economic growth during the Modi years has been faster in comparison to the growth during the Manmohan Singh years. The question, though, is: does this pass the basic smell test? One way of figuring this out is to take a look at real-time economic indicators which capture the economic decisions of the average Indian.
 
 
Since January 2015, when India adopted a new way of calculating the GDP, the growth figure has not been in line with high-frequency economic indicators that reflect the economic decisions of individuals. Unlike GDP growth, the economic indicators used here, from domestic car sales to steel output, are real numbers (except inflation) and not theoretical constructs. So, if domestic car sales are growing, it is a reflection of robust urban consumer demand. If steel production is growing, it shows a robust car industry which uses a lot of steel, and a better physical infrastructure that can be used by individuals, among other things.
 
 
Let’s look at 15 economic indicators and see what they suggest. The growth of 11 out of the following 15 economic indicators was better during the second term of Manmohan Singh than Modi’s term. It is worth reminding here that the United Progressive Alliance’s (UPA’s) second term was by all accounts worse than its first term. Hence, we are comparing the worst of Manmohan with the best of Modi.
 
 
'''(1) Domestic two-wheeler sales:''' Motorcycle sales during the Manmohan Singh’s era grew by 12.44% per year. In Modi’s era, growth was at 5.35% per year. Scooter sales during Singh’s era grew by 25.7% per year. In Modi’s era, the growth was at 13.21% per year. Scooters sell more in urban India than rural India. Motorcycles sell in both urban as well as rural India. The growth rate of 5.35% per year in motorcycle sales during the Modi years is indicative of the agricultural distress and, accordingly, the slow rise in the consumption power of rural India as well.
 
 
'''(2) Domestic car sales:''' Car sales are an important indicator of how urban India is feeling on the economic front, because no one forces anyone to buy a car. When an individual buys a car (or a two-wheeler for that matter), he or she feels confident enough to make a down payment and pay an equated monthly instalment on the car loan. Car sales grew at 4.42% per year during the Modi years in comparison to 7.92% during the Manmohan years. The major jump during the Manmohan Singh years came in 2009-10 and 2010-11, when car sales increased by 25.22% and 29.08%, respectively.
 
What this again tells us is that urban India, in particular corporate India, has not been very confident on the economic front during the Modi years, irrespective of what they say in public forums. Of course, the growth of cab aggregators Uber and Ola has also played some role in the slowdown of domestic car sales growth in recent years.
 
 
'''(3) Domestic tractor sales:''' This is a good indicator of how rich farmers are feeling on the economic front. During the Modi years, the tractor sales are expected to grow at 4.49% per year. In comparison, tractor sales grew by 15.73% per year during the Manmohan years. This shows the presence of agriculture distress hurting farmers during the Modi years. In fact, domestic tractor sales in 2013-14 had stood at 634,000. The sales fell over the next two years, and in 2015-16 stood at 494,000. Since then, they have recovered to 724,000 during April 2018 to February 2019.
 
 
'''(4) Incremental retail loans growth:''' This is an indicator of how a reasonably large section of the population is feeling about their economic future. People usually take a loan when they are confident enough about repaying it. This may not be true about loans given to the industry but is true about retail loans (i.e. home loans, vehicle loans, etc.), given that the bad loan rate of retail loans stands at just 2%. Bad loans are loans which haven’t been repaid for 90 days or more.
 
 
Retail loans given out by banks during the Modi era are expected to grow at 19.92% per year in comparison to 22.47% per year during the Manmohan era.
 
 
'''(5) Airline passenger traffic:''' This is one point that is perpetually brought up by everyone who believes that the Modi government has done well on the economic front. In the Manmohan years, the number of airline passengers grew by 9.20% per year. It is expected to grow at 15.28% per year during the Modi years.
 
 
'''(6) Passenger revenues of Indian Railways:''' One point which people forget to mention is the fact that the growth in air travel has come at the cost of people upgrading from travelling by Indian Railways. This has led to a slowdown in the growth of passenger revenue of Indian Railways. In the Manmohan years, this was at 10.81% per year. In the Modi years, it is expected to be at 7.32% per year.
 
 
'''(7) Domestic commercial vehicles sales:''' Robust consumer demand should translate into more investment, with companies expanding to cater to the increasing demand. A good way to check whether this is happening or not is to take a look at domestic commercial vehicle sales. Faster sales indicate robust activity on the infrastructure front as well as the industrial front, which ultimately benefits individuals. Commercial vehicles are used to move around finished as well as semi-finished goods.
 
 
During the Modi years, commercial vehicles sales grew at 9.74% per year. In the Manmohan years, they had grown at 10.50% per year. In fact, the growth in commercial vehicles sales during the Modi years has been robust, though it might have been slower than that of Manmohan years. This is primarily on account of the road building programme carried out by the Modi government (as we shall see later).
 
 
'''(8) Cement production:''' Cement production during the Modi years is expected to grow at 4.32% per year against 7.05% per year during the Manmohan era. The cement consumption has grown at a slow pace during the Modi years despite a massive road building programme.
 
 
This essentially tells us two things. First, private sector investment has been slow. Second, the real estate sector, which uses a lot of cement, has been down in the dumps. People aren’t buying new homes. Interestingly, the history of economic development suggests that once people start getting out of agriculture, real estate and construction are the two sectors which they move towards, primarily because both these sectors offer a lot of low-skill jobs. The slow growth in cement production is another indicator that India is not generating enough low-skilled jobs.
 
 
'''(9) Consumption of finished steel:''' Steel consumption is another great indicator of the investment scenario in the country, as the construction of any new infrastructure requires steel. And better infrastructure essentially leads to an improvement in the ease of living of individuals. Data from India Brand Equity Foundation, a trust established by the ministry of commerce and industry, suggests consumption of finished steel is expected to increase 5.18% per year during the Modi era, in comparison to 7.18% per year during the Manmohan era.
 
 
This is indicative of the fact that the investment scenario in India continues to be dull. A dull investment scenario basically means that enough jobs aren’t being created. It also means that the incomes of those who already have jobs are rising at a slower pace.
 
 
'''(10) Income tax growth:''' This is a good indicator of whether the income of individuals working in the formal sector of the economy is growing or not.
 
 
The Modi administration has over the years talked a lot about the income tax collections improving significantly. The income tax collections in the Modi years are expected to grow at 16.85% per year. In comparison, the growth in tax revenue in the Manmohan years was 17.53% per year. The government has also talked about the fact that more people are filing income tax returns now than before. While this is true, this hasn’t exactly translated into faster pace of growth in tax revenue.
 
 
'''(11) Corporation tax growth:''' Companies pay a higher tax when they sell more stuff, and consequently make a higher profit. They sell more when people consume more. People consume more when they are doing well on the financial front. And that’s possible when the overall economy is doing well. During the Modi years, corporation tax collections are expected to grow by 11.20% per year against 13.09% in the Manmohan years.
 
 
'''(12) Consumption of petroleum products:''' The consumption of fuel in an economy which is doing well tends to grow at a faster rate. The consumption of fuel products during the Modi years is expected to grow at 5.91% per year against 3.47% during the Manmohan years. This is another economic indicator that has fared better in the Modi years than the Manmohan years. A simple explanation for this lies in the fact that oil prices were much higher between 2011 and 2014 than they have been since then.
 
 
'''(13) Inflation:''' One of the genuine successes of the Modi government has been on the inflation front. In May 2014, when Narendra Modi took over as prime minister, inflation, as measured by the consumer price index (CPI), stood at 7.72%, with food inflation at 9.21%. In February 2019, inflation was at 2.57%, with food prices falling by 0.66%. During 2018-2019, food prices have risen by just 0.13%.
 
 
On the flip side, the lack of food inflation is hurting farmers.
 
 
'''(14) Household financial savings:''' This is an indicator which tells us how much people are saving. The problem, in this case, is that data is available only from 2011-12 onwards, which is what we will consider. The gross household financial savings when Manmohan Singh was the prime minister grew at 13% per year. In the Modi years (up to 2017-18) they grew by 11.94% per year. As far as net household financial savings (gross household financial savings minus the financial liabilities of households) are concerned, they grew by 13.79% per year in the Manmohan years. In comparison, they grew by 7.38% per year during the Modi years (up to 2016-17).
 
 
'''(15) Road construction:''' This is another area where the Modi government has done significantly better than the Manmohan Singh government. As of 31 March 2009, the total length of national highways stood at 70,548 kilometres (km). By 31 March 2014, this had increased to 91,287km, at the rate of 5.29% growth per year. By March 2019, the length of national highways is expected to touch 135,676km, with 10,000km of road expected to be constructed during 2018-19. This means an increase of 8.25% per year. Between April and December, 6,715km had already been built.
 
 
To conclude, the Manmohan Singh years come out to be much better than the Modi years, in 11 out of the 15 indicators.
 
 
This essentially brings us back to the question: When so many economic indicators grew faster in the second term of Manmohan Singh vis a vis the first term of Modi, why doesn’t this reflect in the GDP growth figures of the two eras? The Modi years growing at a faster pace than the second term of Manmohan doesn’t make much sense.
 
 
==2012-16: fastest growth in 5 years==
 
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Eco-grows-fastest-in-5-years-at-76-01062016027021 ''The Times of India''], Jun 01 2016
 
 
[[File: Economic growth, trends, 2012-16.jpg|Economic growth, trends, 2012-16; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=01_06_2016_001_034_002&type=P&artUrl=5-YR-HIGH-FOR-INDIAN-ECONOMY-01062016001034&eid=31808 ''The Times of India''], June 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''Eco grows fastest in 5 years at 7.6%'''
 
 
The country's economy grew 7.6% in 2015-16, the fastest in five years, while growth in the fourth quarter clocked 7.9%, keeping India ahead as the fastest growing major economy in the world.
 
 
 
The GDP data also brought cheers for the government, which has completed two years in office and is showcasing revival of the economy as a major achievement. India's 7.9% expansion in JanuaryMarch (fastest in six quarters) is higher than China's 6.7% expansion in the same quarter.In October-December quarter Indian economy grew 7.2%.Growth was powered by strong expansion in the manufacturing, which grew 9.3% in 2015-16 compared to 5.5% in 2014-15 and the farm sector, which clocked a growth of 1.2% in 2015-16 compared to a contraction of 0.2% in the previous year. The growth in the farm sector was despite the impact of a drought. Policy makers lauded the improving health of public finances. “.. India continues to remain a bright spot in the world economy with robust macro-economic and fiscal parameters,“ the finance mini stry said in a statement. Economist said they expect a good monsoon to support improving growth in the months ahead.
 
 
 
[[File: Indian economy, Some facts regarding GDP, Foreign investment, Domestic infrastructure.jpg|Indian economy: Some facts regarding GDP, Foreign investment, Domestic infrastructure: Graphic courtesy: [http://m.thehindu.com/business/Economy/1991present-tracking-progress-in-numbers/article8891883.ece ''The Hindu''], July 24, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: Economic indicators, India, Sensex, Exchange rate, Gross National Product, GDP growth, Forex Reserves, WPI inflation and 10 year gilt yield.jpg|Economic indicators, India: Sensex, Exchange rate, Gross National Product, GDP growth, Forex Reserves, WPI inflation and 10 year gilt yield; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=21_08_2016_017_006_003&type=P&artUrl=Stocks-to-gain-but-bonds-may-slide-21082016017006&eid=31808 ''The Times of India''], August 21, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: Real GDP, CPI, WPI, Bank Credit, Expenditure, Current Account Deficit, Repo Rate, 2011-15.jpg|Real GDP, CPI, WPI, Bank Credit, Expenditure, Current Account Deficit, Repo Rate, 2011-15; Graphic courtesy: [http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/economy-budget-arun-jaitley-narendra-modi-government/1/587099.html ''India Today''], February 15, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: Life expentency at birth, Infant mortality, Access to improved sanitation, Mean year of schooling, Female literacy rate, Male literacy rate, 2010,2011.jpg|Life expentency at birth, Infant mortality, Access to improved sanitation, Mean year of schooling, Female literacy rate, Male literacy rate, 2010,2011; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=ECONOMIC-GIANT-BECOMING-SOCIAL-PYGMY-02032016016019 ''The Times of India''], March 2, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: Income inequalities in India with respect to taxpayers1.jpg|Income inequalities in India with respect to taxpayers; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_005_023_001&type=P&artUrl=INCOME-INEQUALITY-IN-INDIA-IS-THIS-BAD-01032016005023&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: Income inequalities in India with respect to taxpayers2.jpg| Income inequalities in India with respect to taxpayers; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_005_023_001&type=P&artUrl=INCOME-INEQUALITY-IN-INDIA-IS-THIS-BAD-01032016005023&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: The Indian economy vis-à-vis the Chinese economy in terms of GDP.jpg| The Indian economy vis-à-vis the Chinese economy in terms of GDP; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Article.aspx?eid=31973&articlexml=IN-1990-INDIAS-ECONOMY-WAS-ALMOST-AS-LARGE-01032016015011 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: The Indian economy vis-à-vis the Chinese economy.jpg| The Indian economy vis-à-vis the Chinese economy; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_014_005_002&type=P&artUrl=INDIAN-ECONOMY-IS-MORE-GLOBALISED-THAN-CHINA-AND-01032016014005&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
 
 
“With renewed forecast of more than normal monsoon this year, the situation in agriculture is expected to improve significantly , which will eventually lead to revival of consumption demand, especially in rural areas,“ said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings.
 
 
“This in turn should also boost investment sentiment and keep food inflation under control. Also implementation of various government schemes and 7th Pay Commission will have an important bearing. With continued strong performance of the service sector, GDP growth in FY17 should see strong contributions from each sector of the economy . We expect GDP growth in FY17 to be around 7.8%,“ he said.
 
 
But the numbers also showed some weak spots such as sluggish investment growth.
 
 
“Private consumption has emerged as the bulwark of economy in 2015-16, whereas investment growth has slowed.With excess capacity and high leverage, private consumption demand will have to rise further to pare excess capacity and encourage private investment. With normal monsoon, a mild kick to public sector wages and improved transmission of interest rates, private consumption demand is set to get a boost in 2016-17,“ said D K Joshi, chief economist at Crisil.
 
 
==2014-16: Economic indicators==
 
'''See graphic'''
 
 
''Economy, GDP growth, fiscal deficit, industrial growth, inflation and growth in agriculture, forestry and fishing, 2014-17''
 
 
[[File: Economy, GDP growth, fiscal deficit, industrial growth, inflation and growth in agriculture, forestry and fishing, 2014-17.jpg|GDP growth, fiscal deficit, industrial growth, inflation and growth in agriculture, forestry and fishing, 2014-17; Graphic courtesy: [http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/economy/article9512876.ece ''The Hindu Business Line''], Feb 1, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
 
==Facts about Indian economy==
 
===2015-16===
 
[[http://indiabudget.gov.in/es2016-17/efactindia.pdf The Economic Survey: 2016-17]]
 
 
'''Indians on The Move'''
 
[[File: Annual new migrants (in millions), 2011-16, year-wise.jpg|Annual new migrants (in millions), 2011-16, year-wise; [[http://indiabudget.gov.in/es2016-17/efactindia.pdf The Economic Survey: 2016-17]]|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
New estimates based on railway passenger traf c data reveal annual work-related migration of about 9 million people, almost double what the 2011 Census suggests.
 
 
 
'''Biases in Perception'''
 
 
China’s credit rating was upgraded from A+ to AA- in December 2010 while India’s has re- mained unchanged at BBB-. From 2009 to 2015, China’s credit-to-GDP soared from about 142 percent to 205 percent and its growth decelerated. The contrast with India’s indicators is striking.
 
 
 
'''New Evidence on Weak Targeting of Social Programs'''
 
 
Welfare spending in India suffers from misallocation: as the pair of charts show, the districts with the most poor (in red on the left) are the ones that suffer from the greatest shortfall of funds (in red on the right) in social programs. The districts accounting for the poorest 40% receive 29% of the total funding.
 
 
 
'''Political Democracy but Fiscal Democracy?'''
 
 
India has 7 taxpayers for every 100 voters ranking us 13th amongst 18 of our democratic G-20 peers.
 
 
 
'''India's Distinctive Demographic Dividend'''
 
 
India’s share of working age to non-working age population will peak later and at a lower level than that for other countries but last longer. The peak of the growth boost due to the demographic dividend is fast approaching, with peninsular states peaking soon and the hinterland states peaking much later.
 
 
 
'''India Trades More Than China and a Lot Within Itself'''
 
 
As of 2011, India’s openness - measured as the ratio of trade in goods and services to GDP has far overtaken China’s, a country famed for using trade as an engine of growth. India’s internal trade to GDP is also comparable to that of other large countries and very different from the caricature of a barrier-riddled economy.
 
 
 
'''Divergence within India, Big Time'''
 
 
Spatial dispersion in income is still rising in India in the last decade (2004-14), unlike the rest of the world and even China. That is, despite more porous borders within India than between countries internationally, the forces of “convergence” have been elusive.
 
 
 
'''Property Tax Potential Unexploited'''
 
 
Evidence from satellite data indicates that Bengaluru and Jaipur collect only between 5% to 20% of their potential property taxes.
 
 
===2015-16: economy grew 7.9%===
 
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Eco-grew-79-in-15-16-faster-than-01022017025042  Eco grew 7.9% in '15-16, faster than estimated 7.6%, Feb 01 2017: The Times of India]
 
 
[[File: GDP growth, 2012-17 and fiscal deficit, 2013-17.jpg|GDP growth, 2012-17 and fiscal deficit, 2013-17; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Eco-grew-79-in-15-16-faster-than-01022017025042  Eco grew 7.9% in '15-16, faster than estimated 7.6%, Feb 01 2017: The Times of India]|frame|500px]]
 
 
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) said the economy grew by 7.9% in 2015-16, a shade faster than previously estimated 7.6%, on account of better perfor mance by the farm and industrial sectors. CSO, however, left the figure for 2014-15 unchanged at 7.2%.
 
 
The revised growth rate would be the fastest pace of expansion for the economy in five years as data for the new series introduced in 2011-12 is available now. It would give the government ammunition to counter the Opposition's charge that the NDA's handling of the economy has slowed down the growth rate.
 
 
CSO had said that the economy was estimated to grow 7.1% during the current financial year but did not factor in the impact of demonetisation. The Economic Survey , released on Tuesday , however, indicated that the growth rate could slip to 6.5% due to the cash squeeze.
 
 
Higher growth rate would push up the base and could result in a further slowdown during the current finnacial year. It would, however, help the government show a better fiscal performance since the base has expanded.
 
 
Separate data showed the fiscal deficit up to December-end has touched 94% of the full year estimate of Rs 5.3 lakh crore.Fiscal deficit during April-December 2015 was estimated at 88% of the budget estimate.
 
 
=== …vs. 2008-18 (GDP), 2018 (inflation), 2013-18 (deficit)===
 
[[File: The Indian economy in 2019-20 vis-à-vis 2008-18 (GDP growth), 2018 (inflation) and 2013-18 (fiscal deficit)..jpg|The Indian economy in 2019-20 vis-à-vis 2008-18 (GDP growth), 2018 (inflation) and 2013-18 (fiscal deficit). <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIM%2F2020%2F02%2F01&entity=Ar02410&sk=2CA57C3B&mode=image  February 1, 2020: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
'' The Indian economy in 2019-20 vis-à-vis 2008-18 (GDP growth), 2018 (inflation) and 2013-18 (fiscal deficit). ''
 
 
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|E
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:Government|E
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:India|E
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
 
==The economy as in 2017==
 
[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/economic-survey/economic-survey-7-interesting-facts-about-india/listshow/56892884.cms The Times of India], January 31, 2017
 
 
 
For the first time, along with a host of numbers and dry facts, the Economic Survey presented today also highlighted seven curious things about India, ranging from a perception bias against it to a fiscal disparity within it.
 
 
1.
 
'''Indians on the move'''
 
 
New estimates based on railway passenger traffic data reveal annual work-related migration of about 9 million people, almost double what the 2011 Census suggests.
 
 
2.
 
'''Biases in perception'''
 
 
China's credit rating was upgraded from A+ to AA- in December 2010 while India's has remained unchanged at BBB-. From 2009 to 2015, China's credit-to-GDP soared from about 142 percent to 205 percent and its growth decelerated. The contrast with India's indicators is striking.
 
 
3.
 
'''New evidence on weak targeting of social programs'''
 
 
The Survey says that welfare spending in India suffers from misallocation. Districts with the most poor are the ones that suffer from the greatest shortfall of funds in social programs. The districts accounting for the poorest 40% receive 29% of the total funding.
 
 
4.
 
'''Narrow tax base'''
 
 
India has seven taxpayers for every 100 voters, ranking us 13th amongst 18 of our democratic G-20 peers.
 
 
5.
 
'''India trades more than China'''
 
 
As of 2011, India's openness - measured as the ratio of trade in goods and services to GDP - has far overtaken China's. India's internal trade is also comparable to that of other large countries.
 
 
6.
 
'''India's distinctive demographic dividend'''
 
 
There will a steady rise in India's working age population. While it will be slower compared to other countries, it is expected to last for much longer. Peninsular states are fast approaching the peak of the growth boost due to the demographic dividend.
 
 
7.
 
'''Income divergence within India'''
 
 
During the last decade (2004-14), spatial dispersion in income has been on the rise in India, unlike the rest of the world and even China. Despite more porous borders within India than between countries internationally, the geographical graph of per capita income is skewed.
 
 
==2012-18: impact of GST on manufacturing==
 
[[File: 2012-18- The impact of GST on manufacturing.jpg| 2012-18: The impact of GST on manufacturing <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F09%2F03&entity=Ar01722&sk=B5A31E15&mode=text  September 3, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''2012-18- The impact of GST on manufacturing''
 
 
==Economic indicators: 2012-14 vs. 2014-17==
 
'''See graphics''':
 
 
1. ''GDP growth, 2011-17, year-wise and % annual rise in per capita income at current prices, 2012-17, year-wise''
 
 
2. ''Inflation dynamics, 2011-17, year-wise and merchandise exports, 2011-17, FDI inflows, 2013-17, Industrial production, 2012-17, year-wise''
 
 
3. ''Fiscal deficit, 2011-17, total tax revenue, 2012-17, fluctuations in stock market (BSE), 2011-17, year-wise''
 
 
[[File: GDP growth, 2011-17, year-wise and % annual rise in per capita income at current prices, 2012-17, year-wise.jpg|GDP growth, 2011-17, year-wise and % annual rise in per capita income at current prices, 2012-17, year-wise; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=26_05_2017_018_005_011&type=P&artUrl=Three-Cheers-Modi-Has-Much-To-Celebrate-26052017018005&eid=31808 The Times of India], May 26, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: Inflation dynamics, 2011-17, year-wise and merchandise exports, 2011-17, FDI inflows, 2013-17, Industrial production, 2012-17, year-wise.jpg|Inflation dynamics, 2011-17, year-wise and merchandise exports, 2011-17, FDI inflows, 2013-17, Industrial production, 2012-17, year-wise; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=26_05_2017_018_005_011&type=P&artUrl=Three-Cheers-Modi-Has-Much-To-Celebrate-26052017018005&eid=31808 The Times of India], May 26, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: Fiscal deficit, 2011-17, total tax revenue, 2012-17, fluctuations in stock market (BSE), 2011-17, year-wise.jpg|Fiscal deficit, 2011-17, total tax revenue, 2012-17, fluctuations in stock market (BSE), 2011-17, year-wise; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=26_05_2017_018_005_011&type=P&artUrl=Three-Cheers-Modi-Has-Much-To-Celebrate-26052017018005&eid=31808 The Times of India], May 26, 2017|frame|500px]]
 
 
==Indicators 2013-18 (inflation, monsoons, crude prices)==
 
[[File: Inflation in India (CPI)- 2013-18; Performance of monsoons, 2008-17; Value of rupee, Jan- June, 2018; Crude oil prices, 2013-18.jpg|i) Inflation in India (CPI): 2013-18;  <br/> ii) Performance of monsoons, 2008-17; <br/> iii) Value of rupee, Jan- June, 2018; <br/> iv) Crude oil prices, 2013-18 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F06%2F08&entity=Ar02207&sk=F51556D9&mode=text  June 8, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''i) Inflation in India (CPI): 2013-18;  <br/> ii) Performance of monsoons, 2008-17; <br/> iii) Value of rupee, Jan- June, 2018; <br/> iv) Crude oil prices, 2013-18''
 
 
==2014, May- 2018, May==
 
[[File: Four years of Modi government an economic report card.jpg|Four years of Modi government an economic report card <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F05%2F26&entity=Ar03020&sk=894DF94B&mode=text  May 26, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''Four years of Modi government an economic report card''
 
 
==2014, May- 2019 Jan==
 
=== For individual Indians===
 
[[File: 2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- i) Income;  ii)Spending.jpg|2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> i) Income; <br/>  ii) Spending <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F02&entity=Ar00801&sk=D9F71FF2&mode=image  February 2, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: 2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- iii) Investment;  iv) Wealth from stock market.jpg|2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> iii) Investment;  <br/> iv) Wealth from stock market <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F02&entity=Ar00801&sk=D9F71FF2&mode=image  February 2, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: 2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- v) Falling inflation;  vi) A connected life and vii) healthier and more literate.jpg|2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> v) Falling inflation;  <br/> vi) A connected life and <br/> vii) healthier and more literate <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F02&entity=Ar00801&sk=D9F71FF2&mode=image  February 2, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
'''See graphics''':
 
 
'' 2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> i) Income;  <br/> ii)Spending ''
 
 
''2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> iii) Investment; <br/> iv) Wealth from stock market''
 
 
''2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for individual Indians- <br/> v) Falling inflation;  <br/> vi) A connected life and <br/> vii) healthier and more literate''
 
 
===For the country as a whole===
 
[[File: 2014, May- 2019 Jan- an economic report card for the country as a whole.jpg| 2014, May- 2019 Jan: an economic report card for the country as a whole <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F02&entity=Ar00901&sk=D3CDA767&mode=image  February 2, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphic''':
 
 
''2014, May- 2019 Jan: an economic report card for the country as a whole''
 
 
==Oct 2016- Jan 2018: industry, manufacturing, inflation==
 
[[File: Oct 2016- Jan 2018- industrial output, manufacturing, and retail inflation in India .jpg|Oct 2016- Jan 2018: industrial output, manufacturing, and retail inflation in India  <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F02%2F13&entity=Ar02220&sk=4210311F&mode=text  Retail prices ease, factory output beats expectations, February 13, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F02%2F13&entity=Ar02220&sk=4210311F&mode=text  Retail prices ease, factory output beats expectations, February 13, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
 
 
 
Retail inflation cooled in January on the back of slowing food prices, while industrial output growth in December was better than expected, thanks to robust manufacturing and capital goods sectors.
 
 
Data released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) on Monday showed inflation, as measured by the consumer price index (CPI), rose an annual 5.1% in January, slower than previous month’s 5.2%. Consumer food prices also cooled and increased 4.7%, lower than near 5% increase in December. Housing prices remained firm, and surged 8.3% during the month.
 
 
Earlier this month, RBI kept interest rates unchanged and flagged risks to inflation from several factors, including the government missing the fiscal deficit target for 2017-18. Economist said inflation in non-food items continues to be worrisome, with clothing and footwear
 
 
(4.7%), housing (8.3%), fuel
 
 
(7.7%) household goods
 
 
(4.9%), all being high.
 
 
“However, elevated fuel prices and the base effect will keep CPI inflation in the vicinity of 5% for the rest of the year till March,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings, adding that cooling food prices will have a calming effect on retail inflation.
 
 
Separate data released by the CSO showed industrial output growth rose 7.1% in December, slower than previous month’s upwardly revised 8.4% but still higher than market expectations. The manufacturing sector rose an annual 8.4% in December, compared to 0.6% in same month last year.
 
 
Several data sets in the past few months have pointed to a revival in the manufacturing sector as it shrugs off the impact of demonetization and rollout issues linked to the GST. Economist said the robust trend in factory output augured well for overall growth.
 
 
“Higher growth in vehicles and transport bodes well for the economy. We expect IIP growth to trend higher in January also as commercial vehicle sales have expanded by 36.6%. The positive contribution of cement, diesel and even two wheelers augurs well for economic recovery, especially for rural economy,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, group chief economic adviser at SBI.
 
 
==2016 Nov-2018 Dec==
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F09&entity=Ar02905&sk=947D9039&mode=text  View within RBI: Rate cut needed now, inflationary fear not a worry, February 9, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
 
 
[[File: The RBI’s real-time analysis (in Feb 2019) of inflation, consumer confidence, capacity utilisation and employment, 2016 Nov-2018 Dec.jpg| The RBI’s real-time analysis (in Feb 2019) of inflation, consumer confidence, capacity utilisation and employment, 2016 Nov-2018 Dec <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F02%2F09&entity=Ar02905&sk=947D9039&mode=text  View within RBI: Rate cut needed now, inflationary fear not a worry, February 9, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) headed by RBI governor Shaktikanta Das has opted to pare key policy rates based on real-time analysis, leaning on findings of its surveys, prevailing market conditions and extensive consultations with stakeholders, instead of postponing a decision for fear of inflationary pressures flaring up.
 
 
Although Urjit Patel had not explicitly changed the monetary policy stance in his last policy announcement in December, the assessment was that the governor, who resigned later in the month, was dovish in his stance. Besides, the RBI’s inflation modelling has been under scrutiny for the last 18 months and critics have faulted the central bank for misreading the inflation situation.
 
 
While deputy governor Viral Acharya acknowledged the problems, he said the RBI has sought to fix them. “We started a little bit of grassroots work. We are talking to agri specialists, agri economists in the country to get a better sense. So, hopefully, we’ll get better with time. Not to mention we have had extensive consultations with a lot of experts over the last two months or so, and the effort is to fine tune the system as much as possible.”
 
 
Apart from retail inflation, which was estimated at 2.2%, the RBI’s internal survey showed that inflationary expectations were well-anchored. Although oil price pressure has remained for the last few months, agriculture economists reckon that food inflation will remain benign, especially in the wake of a good winter. In fact, Das pointed to higher wheat yield this year due to favourable weather conditions.
 
 
The other positive that weighed on the MPC was an improvement in consumer confidence as well as business confidence, amid an improvement in capacity utilisation by industry. In fact, there are pockets in the manufacturing space where capacity constraints have started to emerge and a lower interest rate is expected to help provide a boost to investment and bridge this gap in the coming months. With buyer sentiment improving, demand in several other sectors is expected to rise.
 
 
The consumer confidence survey suggests that respondents expect an improvement on almost all counts. The only exception is income, where the sentiment seemed to sour a little in December, compared to the previous month. But, they are upbeat on investment, employment and income a year down the line.
 
 
Similarly, on business expectations, more respondents now believe that there will be an improvement across the board — from production, to order book and capacity utilisation — with selling price and employment being two parameters on which they were less upbeat than the previous survey.
 
 
==2018 Aug vs. June: mixed trends==
 
[[File: The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018- Passenger vehicles, Commercial vehicles, CIL output, Non-oil export.jpg|The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018: Passenger vehicles, Commercial vehicles, CIL output, Non-oil export <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIM%2F2018%2F10%2F01&entity=Ar02001&sk=C6C8F32F&mode=image  October 1, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018- Rail freight, Airlines, Petrol, Bank deposits, Non-food bank credit.jpg|The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018: Rail freight, Airlines, Petrol, Bank deposits, Non-food bank credit <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIM%2F2018%2F10%2F01&entity=Ar02001&sk=C6C8F32F&mode=image  October 1, 2018: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
'''See graphics''':
 
 
''The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018: Passenger vehicles, Commercial vehicles, CIL output, Non-oil export''
 
 
''The growth of the Indian economy, June, July, Aug 2018: Rail freight, Airlines, Petrol, Bank deposits, Non-food bank credit''
 
 
 
=Agriculture’s share in India’s economy=
 
==1950-2011==
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F06%2F06&entity=Ar01522&sk=C0422B57&mode=text  June 6, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
 
 
[[File: Share of agriculture in Gross Value Added at constant prices , 1950-2011.jpg|Share of agriculture in Gross Value Added at constant prices , 1950-2011 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F06%2F06&entity=Ar01522&sk=C0422B57&mode=text  June 6, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
Indian Economy No More A Bet On Monsoon As Farming’s Role Shrinks
 
 
For years, India’s economy leaned heavily on agriculture, so a poor monsoon could rattle it. But agriculture’s share in the gross value addition (GVA) — value of goods and services minus input costs — to the economy has been steadily falling. It stood at 55% at the start of the first five-year plan in 1950-51, but dropped below 50% by 1961-62. Today, agriculture contributes less than a fifth of India’s GVA
 
 
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:Government|EECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
[[Category:India|EECONOMY: INDIA 1
 
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
 
 
=Balance of payment/ current account deficit=
 
==2016-2017==
 
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Deficit-widens-due-to-lower-remittances-24032017026033  Deficit widens due to lower remittances, March 24, 2017: The Times of India]
 
 
 
Remittances from overseas Indians has been dropping continuously for the last five quarters, contributing to the widening of current account deficit (CAD). The trade gap has also widened due to lower software exports.
 
  
Balance of payment data released, shows that net personal transfers -which are largely remittances by Indians employed overseas--fell to $13.6 billion during the demonetisation quarter from $14.9 billion, a drop of 9.7%.
+
[[Category:India |H ]]
 +
[[Category:Health |H ]]
 +
[[Category:Climate/Meteorology |H ]]
 +
[[Category:Natural Disasters |H ]]
  
According to numbers released by the RBI, the current account deficit widened to $ 7.9 billion (or 1.4% of GDP) in Q3FY17 as compared to $ 7.1 billion (1.4% of GDP) in Q3FY16 and $ 3.4 billion in (0.6% of GDP) in Q2FY17. The CAD is the difference between income from exports and imports, plus the difference from between outbound and inbound investment income.
+
= Heatwave: One word or two?=
 +
[https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/heatwave Oxford Dictionaries] spell heatwave as one word, and provide this illustration:
  
A statement issued by the Central bank said that the CAD widened despite a slightly lower trade deficit year-on-year, primarily on account of a decline in net invisibles receipts. Invisible includes remittances from software, services and money sent by Indians working oversea. Net services receipts moderated compared to Q3FY16, due to a fall in earnings from software, finan cial services and charges for intellectual property rights.
 
  
From April to December, however, the deficit halved to 0.7%, from 1.4% a year ago.
+
''‘when a heatwave occurs many people become increasingly bad-tempered’ ''
  
This was primarily because of fall in earnings from software, financial services and charges for intellectual property rights.
+
In Australia, too, it is one word.
  
Earnings from software exports have been declining year-on-year, but the third quarter has seen a sequential increase in software exports over the second quarter.
+
Among major dictionaries Cambridge English Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary and Macmillan Dictionary, too, spell heatwave as one word. Only Merriam-Webster spells it as two.
  
The net foreign direct investment of $9.8 billion during the reporting quarter was marginally lower than last year. The RBI said that there was a net outflow of portfolio investment of about $11.3 billion during the period in both equity and debt segments, as against a net inflow of $0.6 billion in the year-ago period. During the current fiscal, net FDI rose 12.3% to $30.6 billion as compared to April-December 2016.
+
In large areas, a heat wave is declared when the maximum temperature is 45 degrees Celsius for two consecutive days and a severe heat wave is when the mercury touches the 47 degrees-mark for two days on the trot.
  
 +
In small areas like Delhi, heat wave is declared if the temperature soars to 45 degrees Celsius even for a day, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).
  
=Governments and economic growth=
+
[[Category:Climate/Meteorology|H
==1947-2018: India has performed better under ‘weak’ governments==
+
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F11%2F17&entity=Ar02001&sk=C0F6CC8D&mode=text    Sadanand Dhume | In economic terms, India has performed better under so-called weak governments |17 Nov 2018|''The Times of India'']
+
[[Category:Health|H
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:India|H
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:Natural Disasters|H
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
  
 +
=Rise in heatwaves=
 +
==2001-16==
 +
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=MERCURY-SOARING-Severe-heatwaves-have-doubled-but-plans-21052016015012 ''The Times of India''], May 21 2016
  
According to the World Poverty Clock, an online database… About 41 Indians escape extreme poverty every minute.
+
Jayashree Nandi
  
India’s achievement is creditable by any yardstick. But it occurs against a backdrop of rising prosperity worldwide.  
+
Rajasthan's Phalodi recorded the country's highest temperature ever of 51°C. The India Meteorological Department has said the frequency of severe heatwaves had increased sharply in the past 15 years.
  
A political paradox of sorts has accompanied India’s upward economic arc. For the first four decades of independence, single-party majority governments delivered anaemic growth. India’s most dramatic assault on poverty has come in the coalition era that followed Rajiv Gandhi’s defeat in the 1989 general election.
+
Most heat-affected states have no plan in place to prevent mortality and morbidity associated with extreme heat. IMD officials said the average frequency of severe heat waves had doubled from 50 days a year across India until 2000, to about 100 in the 2001-2010 decade. The figures are cumulative numbers from all IMD stations. So, if there are 10 severe heat wave days in two cities simultaneously, it's counted as 20.
  
Between 1950 and 1980, India’s economy expanded at an annualised average of 3.6%. Per capita income grew at a sluggish 1.5% per year. These figures ticked upward in the 1980s, but the real breakthrough only came after India embraced liberalisation and globalisation in 1991. Since then per capita income has grown on average by 4.9%. Since 2004, it has grown even faster – by over 6.1% annually. In this period, India has lifted more than 350 million people out of extreme poverty.
+
“The frequency of both heatwaves and severe heatwaves has increased, particularly in the last two decades. The reasons could be related to climate change, urban heat island effect or others,“ said B P Yadav, director, National Weather Forecasting Centre at IMD.
  
Why did weak governments deliver better results than strong ones? The simple answer: in India, the era of single-party majorities coincided with the heyday of state planning. After Independence, instead of embracing a market economy, where supply and demand determine production, India scurried down the rabbit hole of socialism where pointy-headed bureaucrats and their political masters called the shots.
+
He added that between 2010 and 2016 too, heatwaves showed an upward trend.IMD has started issuing a separate colour-coded heat wave forecasting from this year, which alerts agencies on when interventions are required, because of what it called a “visible increase“ in both mean temperature and heat wave incidents.
  
Under both Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi the government raised trade barriers, nationalised private enterprises, raised extortionate taxes on the rich, and told companies how to run their business. Had they instead used their power to build infrastructure, strengthen rule of law, encourage private enterprise and educate the masses, India need not have waited this long to nearly wipe out poverty.
+
IMD's observations correlate with warnings by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) of a steady increase in warm days and nights globally, and higher temperatures in cities due to the urban heat island effect.
  
But as four years of Modi have shown, a strong government’s tendency to overreach remains a recurring national problem.
+
The Indian Institute of Public Health (IIPH), which has developed a heat action plan for Ahmedabad and helped cities in Maharashtra develop theirs, has advised the Union health ministry to ensure that similar plans are implemented in all states affected by heatwaves.
  
Only a strong government could have come up with a cockamamie idea like demonetisation, deemed too crazy to try even by a basket case economy like Venezuela. In a less dramatic – but nonetheless destructive – vein the Modi government has armed tax inspectors with extortionate powers, escalating the tax terrorism the Bharatiya Janata Party (rightly) protested when in opposition.
+
As of now Maharashtra, Gujarat, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh have started a heat action plan.
  
On trade, tariff-loving bureaucrats have prevailed over liberalisers. And while an elegant simplicity marks a goods and services tax in most countries that have adopted it, in India it’s a hot mess designed to privilege discretion over clarity.  
+
“Mortality increases as soon as there is a heatwave.For instance, on Thursday when it recorded 48 degrees in Ahmedabad, there were 130 deaths compared to 100 deaths daily on an average.During the 2010 heat wave, there were 310 deaths in a day and about 800 deaths in total in the following week,“ said Dr Dileep Mavalankar, director, IIPH, Gandhinagar.
  
 +
“Since the frequency of heatwaves is increasing due to climate change, we have been pursuing the implementation of heat plans with the government. Ideally local government administration or municipalities should be in charge of it,“ Mavalankar said.
  
'' The writer is a resident fellow at American Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC. ''
+
== 2017 ==
 +
[https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/up-front/story/20170911-heat-humidity-wet-bulb-temperature-1035310-2017-09-02 India Today , The heat is on “India Today” 11/9/2017]
 +
[[File: The heat is on .jpg| The heat is on |frame|500px]]
  
=Governments and economic policy=
+
A study published this month in Science Advances, an American journal, shows that by the end of the century large parts of India may become uninhabitable due to a combination of heat and humidity. The study examined data based on rising wet-bulb temperatures (TW), a measure of the air temperature combined with humidity, to account for relatively cool days that feel hotter because of high humidity. Once a certain wet-bulb temperature is exceeded, the body can no longer cool itself. According to the study, at these temperatures, "exposure, for even a few hours will result in death even for the fittest of humans under shaded, well-ventilated conditions".
== Policy uncertainty, 2004-19==
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03200&sk=460CB278&mode=text  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
+
  
[[File: Correlation of EPU index with macroeconomic vulnerability, 2004-19.jpg|Correlation of EPU index with macroeconomic vulnerability, 2004-19 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03200&sk=460CB278&mode=text  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
+
=Deaths caused=
 +
==2010-18==
 +
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F03&entity=Ar01215&sk=1AD84B21&mode=text  Heat waves killed over 6k since 2010, January 3, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
  
  
If there is one thing that businesses dread, it’s policy uncertainty and lack of predictability. And, the government also recognised this and suggested that an increase in economic policy uncertainty dampens investment growth for at least five quarters.
+
Over 6,100 people have died in India due to heat wave in the last nine years (2010-18) with the year 2015 alone recording nearly one-third such deaths. Among states, Andhra Pradesh had recorded the maximum casualties during 2013-15 period.
  
The Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) Index — prepared using certain keywords appearing in newspapers — shows that policy uncertainty in India that had peaked around April 2012 is now much lower. The Economic Survey seems to draw comfort from the fact that EPU in India is now decoupled from global uncertainty, a trend that began in 2015.
+
Analysis of the casualty figures shows that Andhra Pradesh, Telangana (after its formation in June, 2014), Odisha and West Bengal had together reported over 90% of total deaths due to heat wave during the period.
  
“Uncertainty seems to have stabilised at lower levels in case of India since last few years, which is noteworthy given the recent surge in global uncertainty, partly due to rising trade tensions between US and China, uncertainty about outcome of Brexit, slower world growth,” the annual economic report card tabled in Parliament said. In 2018, for instance, the global uncertainty index zoomed from 112 to 341, while it remained under 100 in India.
+
Sharing the nationwide cumulative figures in Lok Sabha, minister of earth sciences Harsh Vardhan on Wednesday said a latest study had showed that heat waves have increased in many parts of the country with these conditions being experienced generally during the period between March and July.
  
The survey suggested that lower uncertainty has started to show an improvement in the investment rate. Gross fixed capital formation is also showing an upward trend from April-June 2017-18 until around the first half of the last financial year.
+
He, however, said the India Meteorological Department in collaboration with state health departments have started a heat action plan in many parts of the country as “an adaptive measure” to forewarn about heat waves and advise on preventive action to be taken. Figures show that 2,081 people had died due to heat wave in 2015.
  
At the same time, it recognised that uncertainty is not the only factor impacting investment decisions, with interest rates, borrowing cost, price rise and capacity utilisation being the other parameters. While the going may be better compared to the past, frequent policy changes and trust deficit are major concerns for businesses even now. To address this the survey has outlined several steps, including providing a forward guidance, apart from reducing ambiguity and arbitrariness in policy implementation.
+
==2013-16==
 +
[[File: deaths caused due to heatwaves, 2013-March 2016.jpg|Deaths caused due to heatwaves, 2013-March 2016; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=87-deaths-take-heatwave-toll-since-2013-to-28042016007029 ''The Times of India''], April 27, 2016|frame|500px]]
 +
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=87-deaths-take-heatwave-toll-since-2013-to-28042016007029 ''The Times of India''], April 27, 2016
  
“To ensure predictability, the horizon over which policies will not be changed must be mandatorily specified so that investor can be provided the assurance about future policy certainty. While this will generate some constraints in policy-making, such voluntary tying of policymakers’ hands is undertaken in several cases, including the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, the Monetary Policy Framework of the Reserve Bank of India.”
+
'''87 deaths take heatwave toll since 2013 to 4,204'''
 +

  
The survey also proposed sub-indices of EPU to capture economic policy uncertainty stemming from fiscal policy, tax policy, monetary policy, trade policy, and banking policy, while suggesting monitoring at the “highest level”.
+
As many as 87 people died between January and March 2016 owing to a heatwave, with the first three months of 2016 experiencing significantly abovenormal temperatures.
  
Although several government departments have in past got quality certifications, the survey made a case afresh, arguing that it will not just train officers and other employees but also ensure that policies are properly implemented at lower levels.
+
At 56, Telangana recorded the maximum casualties, followed by Odisha (19).Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala witnessed one heatwave casualty each.
  
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
The deaths in 2013 take India's heatwave toll since 2013 to a staggering 4,204. In 2013, 2014 and 2015, heatwave killed 1,433, 549, and 2,135 peo ple, respectively. The figures were shared by earth sciences minister Y S Chowdary in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday in a written response to a question asked by over nine parliamentarians.
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[[Category:Government|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[[Category:India|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
  
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
The number may go much higher if states do not take adequate precautionary me asures, as advised by IMD, in view of a forecast of higherthan-average temperatures for this year's summer (April-June). “Above normal heatwave conditions are very likely over central and north-west India during the 2016 hot weather season,“ Chowdary said.
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[[Category:Government|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[[Category:India|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
  
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
==2018==
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F12%2F03&entity=Ar00523&sk=D454DAA6&mode=text  Sushmi Dey, ’31k heat-related deaths of 65+ in India in 2018’, December 3, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
[[Category:Government|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
[[Category:India|EECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1ECONOMY: INDIA 1
+
ECONOMY: INDIA 1]]
+
  
=India's economy vis-à-vis the world=
 
See [[Gross domestic product (GDP): India]]
 
  
[[Economy, India: international comparisons]]
+
India reported over 31,000 heat-related deaths of people older than 65 years in 2018, the second highest in the world after China (62,000), a new Lancet Countdown report on health and climate change shows, reports Sushmi Dey.
 +
While heat-related mortality among people above 65 has increased by 53.7% globally during the past 20 years, it more than doubled in India. Globally, 2,96,000 deaths among the age group were reported in 2018.
  
= 2016 : Demonetisation =
+
The report shows India accounted for highest productivity loss at 40% of the total 302 billion work hours lost during 2019.
'''Please see''':
+
  
[[Demonetisation of high value currency- 1946, 1978: India]]
+
''' India’s agriculture sector among worst-affected by heat: Report '''
  
[[Demonetisation of high value currency- 2016: India]]
+
The report underlines that livelihoods are at risk because heat is increasingly affecting people’s ability to work outdoors in developing regions with significant economic implications. “India and Indonesia were among the worst affected countries, seeing losses of potential labour capacity equivalent to 4-6% of their annual gross domestic product,” it says. The report highlights that India’s agriculture sector was among the worst affected.
  
=See also=
+
“The pandemic has shown us that when health is threatened on a global scale, our economies and ways of life can come to a standstill,” Dr Ian Hamilton, executive director of Lancet Countdown, said. “The threats to human health are multiplying and intensifying due to climate change and unless we change course, our healthcare systems are at risk of being overwhelmed in the future.”
[[Developmental indicators: India]]
+
  
[[Economy: India 1]] 
+
In 2019, India saw a record number of above-baseline days of heatwave exposure affecting people aged over 65. Eight of the 10 highest ranking years of heatwave exposure in India have occurred since 2010. “The changing climate has downstream effects, impacting broader environmental systems, which in turn harm human health,” says the report.
  
[[Economy: India 2 (Ministry data)]]
+
[[Category:Climate/Meteorology|H HEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:Health|H HEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:India|H HEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:Natural Disasters|H HEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
  
[[Economy, India: international comparisons]]
+
=Impact on health=
 +
==2012-16: 40m additional Indians affected==
 +
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F11%2F29&entity=Ar00317&sk=EA6AA0B1&mode=text  ‘Heatwaves hit 40m more Indians in 5 yrs’, November 29, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
  
[[Gross domestic product (GDP): India]]
 
  
[[Per capita Income: India and its states]]
+
Climate change is hitting home. India saw an increase of 40 million in the number of people exposed to heatwaves from 2012 to 2016 (counting both years), a global report prepared by 27 leading academic institutions, the United Nations and inter-governmental agencies has said.
  
==And also...==
+
The surge in heatwaves in India posed a major danger to health and called for urgent action to develop and implement local heat action plans, according to the study.
[[Corporate Tax: India]]
+
  
[[Direct taxes: India]]
+
The Lancet Countdown report on health and climate change, released on Wednesday, said average temperatures in India are projected to rise alarmingly. Between 1901 and 2007, India’s mean temperature rose by more than 0.5 degree Celsius. “While the world is bracing for an increase of around 2 degrees C over the 21st century, northern, central and western India may witness increases averaging 2.2 to 5.5 degrees by the end of the 21st century,” it said.
  
[[Gift tax: India]]
 
  
[[Goods and services tax (GST)]]
+
'''Heatwaves tied to exacerbation of heart failure, kidney injury'''
  
[[Income Tax India: Expert advice, 2016-17]]
+
Globally, the Lancet report said, vulnerability to extremes of heat has steadily risen since 1990 in every region, with 157 million more people exposed to heatwaves in 2017 as compared to 2000.
  
[[Income Tax India: Expert advice, 2017-18]]
+
The average person experienced an additional 1.4 days of heatwaves per year over the same period, it said. Low- and middleincome countries, India included, are likely to be worst affected by climate change, given weaker health systems and poorer infrastructure, experts said.
  
[[Income Tax India: Expert advice]]
+
Heatwaves are associated with increased rates of heat stress and heat stroke, exacerbation of heart failure and acute kidney injury from dehydration. Children, the elderly and those with pre-existing morbidities are particularly vulnerable.
  
[[Income Tax India: Laws]]
+
Dr K Srinath Reddy, an author of the India policy brief of the Lancet report, said identifying local heat hot spots through appropriate tracking and modelling of meteorological data is needed tackle the crisis.
  
[[Income Tax India: NRIs]]
+
“Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation has adopted a heat action plan, which necessitates measures such as building heat shelters, ensuring availability of water and removing neonatal ICU from the top floor of hospitals. It has helped bring down the impact of heatwave of vulnerable population. Similar action plan should be developed by other states also,” said Dr Reddy, who is also head of the Public Health Foundation of India.
  
[[Income Tax, India: Statistics]]
+
The Lancet report shows 153 billion hours of labour were lost globally in 2017 due to heat, an increase of 62 billion hours relative to year 2000. The impacts, the authors on India policy brief note, vary with different sectors with the agriculture being most vulnerable as compared to the industrial and services sector.
  
[[Indirect Taxes: India]]
+
“For India, whose large agriculture economy makes up 18% of the country’s GDP and employs nearly half the population, this translates into substantial climate-related impacts on the workforce and economy,” said Dr Reddy.
  
[[Personal Taxes: India]]
+
Overall, India lost nearly 75,000 million hours of labour in 2017, relative to about 43,000 million hours in 2000, an increase of over 30,000 million hours over two decades. “For a developing economy like India, this represents a substantial impact on individual, household and national budgets, necessitating urgent national and regional adaptation plans,” the report said.
  
[[Property Tax: India]]
+
=Impact of heat on productivity/ 1995=
 +
[[File: The impact of heat on productivity in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, 1995.jpg| The impact of heat on productivity in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka/ 1995 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03105&sk=4B08C0DC&mode=image  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
[[Service tax: India]]
+
See graphic, ' The impact of heat on productivity in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka/ 1995  '
  
[[Wealth tax: India]]
+
[[Category:Climate/Meteorology|H HEATWAVES: INDIAHEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:Health|H HEATWAVES: INDIAHEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:India|H HEATWAVES: INDIAHEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]
 +
[[Category:Natural Disasters|H HEATWAVES: INDIAHEATWAVES: INDIA
 +
HEATWAVES: INDIA]]

Revision as of 08:13, 14 December 2020

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

Heatwave: One word or two?

Oxford Dictionaries spell heatwave as one word, and provide this illustration:


‘when a heatwave occurs many people become increasingly bad-tempered’

In Australia, too, it is one word.

Among major dictionaries Cambridge English Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary and Macmillan Dictionary, too, spell heatwave as one word. Only Merriam-Webster spells it as two.

In large areas, a heat wave is declared when the maximum temperature is 45 degrees Celsius for two consecutive days and a severe heat wave is when the mercury touches the 47 degrees-mark for two days on the trot.

In small areas like Delhi, heat wave is declared if the temperature soars to 45 degrees Celsius even for a day, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

Rise in heatwaves

2001-16

The Times of India, May 21 2016

Jayashree Nandi

Rajasthan's Phalodi recorded the country's highest temperature ever of 51°C. The India Meteorological Department has said the frequency of severe heatwaves had increased sharply in the past 15 years.

Most heat-affected states have no plan in place to prevent mortality and morbidity associated with extreme heat. IMD officials said the average frequency of severe heat waves had doubled from 50 days a year across India until 2000, to about 100 in the 2001-2010 decade. The figures are cumulative numbers from all IMD stations. So, if there are 10 severe heat wave days in two cities simultaneously, it's counted as 20.

“The frequency of both heatwaves and severe heatwaves has increased, particularly in the last two decades. The reasons could be related to climate change, urban heat island effect or others,“ said B P Yadav, director, National Weather Forecasting Centre at IMD.

He added that between 2010 and 2016 too, heatwaves showed an upward trend.IMD has started issuing a separate colour-coded heat wave forecasting from this year, which alerts agencies on when interventions are required, because of what it called a “visible increase“ in both mean temperature and heat wave incidents.

IMD's observations correlate with warnings by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) of a steady increase in warm days and nights globally, and higher temperatures in cities due to the urban heat island effect.

The Indian Institute of Public Health (IIPH), which has developed a heat action plan for Ahmedabad and helped cities in Maharashtra develop theirs, has advised the Union health ministry to ensure that similar plans are implemented in all states affected by heatwaves.

As of now Maharashtra, Gujarat, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh have started a heat action plan.

“Mortality increases as soon as there is a heatwave.For instance, on Thursday when it recorded 48 degrees in Ahmedabad, there were 130 deaths compared to 100 deaths daily on an average.During the 2010 heat wave, there were 310 deaths in a day and about 800 deaths in total in the following week,“ said Dr Dileep Mavalankar, director, IIPH, Gandhinagar.

“Since the frequency of heatwaves is increasing due to climate change, we have been pursuing the implementation of heat plans with the government. Ideally local government administration or municipalities should be in charge of it,“ Mavalankar said.

2017

India Today , The heat is on “India Today” 11/9/2017

The heat is on

A study published this month in Science Advances, an American journal, shows that by the end of the century large parts of India may become uninhabitable due to a combination of heat and humidity. The study examined data based on rising wet-bulb temperatures (TW), a measure of the air temperature combined with humidity, to account for relatively cool days that feel hotter because of high humidity. Once a certain wet-bulb temperature is exceeded, the body can no longer cool itself. According to the study, at these temperatures, "exposure, for even a few hours will result in death even for the fittest of humans under shaded, well-ventilated conditions".

Deaths caused

2010-18

Heat waves killed over 6k since 2010, January 3, 2018: The Times of India


Over 6,100 people have died in India due to heat wave in the last nine years (2010-18) with the year 2015 alone recording nearly one-third such deaths. Among states, Andhra Pradesh had recorded the maximum casualties during 2013-15 period.

Analysis of the casualty figures shows that Andhra Pradesh, Telangana (after its formation in June, 2014), Odisha and West Bengal had together reported over 90% of total deaths due to heat wave during the period.

Sharing the nationwide cumulative figures in Lok Sabha, minister of earth sciences Harsh Vardhan on Wednesday said a latest study had showed that heat waves have increased in many parts of the country with these conditions being experienced generally during the period between March and July.

He, however, said the India Meteorological Department in collaboration with state health departments have started a heat action plan in many parts of the country as “an adaptive measure” to forewarn about heat waves and advise on preventive action to be taken. Figures show that 2,081 people had died due to heat wave in 2015.

2013-16

Deaths caused due to heatwaves, 2013-March 2016; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, April 27, 2016

The Times of India, April 27, 2016

87 deaths take heatwave toll since 2013 to 4,204 

As many as 87 people died between January and March 2016 owing to a heatwave, with the first three months of 2016 experiencing significantly abovenormal temperatures.

At 56, Telangana recorded the maximum casualties, followed by Odisha (19).Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala witnessed one heatwave casualty each.

The deaths in 2013 take India's heatwave toll since 2013 to a staggering 4,204. In 2013, 2014 and 2015, heatwave killed 1,433, 549, and 2,135 peo ple, respectively. The figures were shared by earth sciences minister Y S Chowdary in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday in a written response to a question asked by over nine parliamentarians.

The number may go much higher if states do not take adequate precautionary me asures, as advised by IMD, in view of a forecast of higherthan-average temperatures for this year's summer (April-June). “Above normal heatwave conditions are very likely over central and north-west India during the 2016 hot weather season,“ Chowdary said.

2018

Sushmi Dey, ’31k heat-related deaths of 65+ in India in 2018’, December 3, 2020: The Times of India


India reported over 31,000 heat-related deaths of people older than 65 years in 2018, the second highest in the world after China (62,000), a new Lancet Countdown report on health and climate change shows, reports Sushmi Dey. While heat-related mortality among people above 65 has increased by 53.7% globally during the past 20 years, it more than doubled in India. Globally, 2,96,000 deaths among the age group were reported in 2018.

The report shows India accounted for highest productivity loss at 40% of the total 302 billion work hours lost during 2019.

India’s agriculture sector among worst-affected by heat: Report

The report underlines that livelihoods are at risk because heat is increasingly affecting people’s ability to work outdoors in developing regions with significant economic implications. “India and Indonesia were among the worst affected countries, seeing losses of potential labour capacity equivalent to 4-6% of their annual gross domestic product,” it says. The report highlights that India’s agriculture sector was among the worst affected.

“The pandemic has shown us that when health is threatened on a global scale, our economies and ways of life can come to a standstill,” Dr Ian Hamilton, executive director of Lancet Countdown, said. “The threats to human health are multiplying and intensifying due to climate change and unless we change course, our healthcare systems are at risk of being overwhelmed in the future.”

In 2019, India saw a record number of above-baseline days of heatwave exposure affecting people aged over 65. Eight of the 10 highest ranking years of heatwave exposure in India have occurred since 2010. “The changing climate has downstream effects, impacting broader environmental systems, which in turn harm human health,” says the report.

Impact on health

2012-16: 40m additional Indians affected

‘Heatwaves hit 40m more Indians in 5 yrs’, November 29, 2018: The Times of India


Climate change is hitting home. India saw an increase of 40 million in the number of people exposed to heatwaves from 2012 to 2016 (counting both years), a global report prepared by 27 leading academic institutions, the United Nations and inter-governmental agencies has said.

The surge in heatwaves in India posed a major danger to health and called for urgent action to develop and implement local heat action plans, according to the study.

The Lancet Countdown report on health and climate change, released on Wednesday, said average temperatures in India are projected to rise alarmingly. Between 1901 and 2007, India’s mean temperature rose by more than 0.5 degree Celsius. “While the world is bracing for an increase of around 2 degrees C over the 21st century, northern, central and western India may witness increases averaging 2.2 to 5.5 degrees by the end of the 21st century,” it said.


Heatwaves tied to exacerbation of heart failure, kidney injury

Globally, the Lancet report said, vulnerability to extremes of heat has steadily risen since 1990 in every region, with 157 million more people exposed to heatwaves in 2017 as compared to 2000.

The average person experienced an additional 1.4 days of heatwaves per year over the same period, it said. Low- and middleincome countries, India included, are likely to be worst affected by climate change, given weaker health systems and poorer infrastructure, experts said.

Heatwaves are associated with increased rates of heat stress and heat stroke, exacerbation of heart failure and acute kidney injury from dehydration. Children, the elderly and those with pre-existing morbidities are particularly vulnerable.

Dr K Srinath Reddy, an author of the India policy brief of the Lancet report, said identifying local heat hot spots through appropriate tracking and modelling of meteorological data is needed tackle the crisis.

“Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation has adopted a heat action plan, which necessitates measures such as building heat shelters, ensuring availability of water and removing neonatal ICU from the top floor of hospitals. It has helped bring down the impact of heatwave of vulnerable population. Similar action plan should be developed by other states also,” said Dr Reddy, who is also head of the Public Health Foundation of India.

The Lancet report shows 153 billion hours of labour were lost globally in 2017 due to heat, an increase of 62 billion hours relative to year 2000. The impacts, the authors on India policy brief note, vary with different sectors with the agriculture being most vulnerable as compared to the industrial and services sector.

“For India, whose large agriculture economy makes up 18% of the country’s GDP and employs nearly half the population, this translates into substantial climate-related impacts on the workforce and economy,” said Dr Reddy.

Overall, India lost nearly 75,000 million hours of labour in 2017, relative to about 43,000 million hours in 2000, an increase of over 30,000 million hours over two decades. “For a developing economy like India, this represents a substantial impact on individual, household and national budgets, necessitating urgent national and regional adaptation plans,” the report said.

Impact of heat on productivity/ 1995

The impact of heat on productivity in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka/ 1995
From: July 5, 2019: The Times of India

See graphic, ' The impact of heat on productivity in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka/ 1995 '

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