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India is the second largest growing economy after China, but it
will overtake its neighbouring country by 2018, the Economist Intelligence
Unit (EIU), the research arm of London-based Economist magazine,
said Tuesday 16.03.2010 Tuesday.
"We forecast that India will overtake China as the fastest
growing major economy by 2018. We expect India's growth on an average
of eight percent in the next five years," EIU senior analyst
Anjalika Bardalai told reporters on the sidelines of 14th Business
Roundtable here.
She said the Indian economy would grow at 6.8 percent during the
current fiscal, at 7.7 percent in 2010-11, and 8 percent the year
later.
But the statistical arm of the Indian government, the Central Statistical
Organisation, has projected the economy to grow by 7.2 percent in
the current fiscal.
"Our growth projection is based on expenditures in the economy
and is not based on factor cost as done by the Indian government,"
Bardalai explained.
The Indian government measures growth on the basis of factor cost.
Factor cost is the cost of factors of production used to produce
final goods and services.
India's GDP during the three quarters in the current fiscal grew
at 6.1 percent, 7.9 percent and 6 percent. While during 2008-09
it grew at 6.7 percent and in 2007-08 at 9.1 percent.
"The GDP will not return back to 9 percent and more as it was
during 2005-08. Also the monetary pressure may not go down as expected,"
The Economist executive editor Daniel Franklin said.
Driven by increasing food prices, India's annual rate of inflation,
based on the wholesale price index, rose to 9.89 percent in February
from 8.56 percent in the previous month, according to an official
data revealed Monday.
It also predicted inflow of investments through Foreign Institutional
Investors (FII) at $75 billion by 2014.
Source: IANS
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