Difficult Word/ Phrase | Contextual Sense |
Choppy | Jerky |
Spur | Incite or stimulate |
Reckon | Expect to be true; believe |
Woe | Great sorrow |
Assertion | A declaration that is made emphatically (as if no supporting evidence were necessary) |
Meagre | Deficient in amount, quality or extent |
Evoke | Make appear |
Flashback | An unexpected but vivid recurrence of a past experience |
Trajectory | the way in which a process or event develops over a period of time |
Reluctant | Offering resistance |
Uptick | A small increase |
Silver lining | a comforting or hopeful aspect of an otherwise desperate or unhappy situation |
Lingering | to persist or continue, esp in the mind |
Aloof | apart |
Flare up | Erupt or intensify suddenly |
Squeeze | to oppress with exacting demands |
Dampen | Suppress or constrain so as to lessen in intensity |
Rising tide | an increase in the amount or strength of something |
Strand | Drive (a vessel) ashore |
Detritus | The remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up |
Choppy (jerky) waters: On India’s post-COVID recovery
The economy’s post-COVID recovery is far from complete; spurring (Incite or stimulate) consumption is the key
India’s gross domestic product (GDP) is reckoned (Expect to be true; believe) to have grown 8.7% while the Gross Value Added (GVA) rose 8.1% in 2021-22, as per national income estimates released on Tuesday. Coming on the back of the sharp decline in economic activity due to the COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020-21, when GDP crashed 6.6% and GVA by 4.8%, the latest numbers show India is emerging out of the tunnel of pandemic-induced woes (Great sorrow). The overall GDP and GVA have indeed recovered from pre-pandemic levels, but only just, by 1.5% and 2.9%, respectively. Remember that growth had already been on a steady decline through 2019-20 even before the lockdowns of 2020 — with GDP growing just 3.7%. The Government’s assertion (A declaration that is made emphatically (as if no supporting evidence were necessary)) that the data establish a ‘full economic recovery’ is not entirely true. For one, it is not a V-shaped recovery, with GVA from job-creating sectors (trade and hotels) still 11.3% below 2019-20’s low levels. This has kept the services sector, as a whole, in line with pre-COVID levels, not above. While GVA from industry is up 6.7% over 2019-20, another job creating sector, construction, is up only 3.4%, while mining has grown a meagre (Deficient in amount, quality or extent) 1.9% over the two-year period. Manufacturing lifted the industry GVA, growing 9.3% from 2019-20 levels, but there are cracks on that front — the January to March 2022 quarter (Q4 of 2021-22) recorded a 0.2% contraction, year-on-year. Overall GDP growth slipped to a four-quarter low of 4.1% in Q4, down from 5.4% in Q3, evoking (Make appear) flashbacks (An unexpected but vivid recurrence of a past experience) of the 2019-20 slowdown and raising concerns about the trajectory (the way in which a process or event develops over a period of time) going forward.
With reluctant (Offering resistance) demand, supply-chain and input cost woes hurting manufacturing, agriculture (that grew at a five-quarter high of 4.1%) and public administration services (whose growth dipped to 7.7% from 16.7% in Q3) lifted the Q4 numbers amid slower growth in Services and Mining over Q3, and a mild 2% uptick (A small increase) in Construction. A recovery in investment demand, helped by the Government’s capital spending, is a silver lining (a comforting or hopeful aspect of an otherwise desperate or unhappy situation), but the lingering (to persist or continue, esp in the mind) concern is that consumption remains troubled, and unless it recovers, private investments will remain aloof (apart) as will sustainable high growth. Private final consumption expenditure grew 7.9% in 2021-22, but it was just ₹1.2 lakh crore or 1.4% over 2019-20. Worse, as inflation flared up (Erupt or intensify suddenly), households’ consumption growth has steadily dropped through 2021-22, growing a mere 1.8% in Q4. Price rise, combined with higher interest rates, could squeeze (to oppress with exacting demands) middle class disposable incomes and dampen (Suppress or constrain so as to lessen in intensity) consumption further. Yes, India is the fastest growing major economy and likely to remain so in 2022-23. But the rising tide (an increase in the amount or strength of something) in the past year has not been enough to lift all boats stranded (Drive (a vessel) ashore) in the detritus (The remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up) of the pandemic and the slowdown that preceded it. The waters are choppy with war and recession worries in the developed world.
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