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New Back Series GDP Data

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November 30, 2018

What is the issue?

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) and NITI Aayog recently released the back series detailing growth numbers for 2005-06 to 2011-12.

What is the report on?

  • Back series calculations are done to link a new series of national accounts with an old series, for better comparison of growth over the years.
  • The Central Statistics Office (CSO) moved to a new base year of 2011-12 from 2004-05 for national accounts, in January 2015.
  • A back series GDP data report was earlier released by an expert committee set up by National Statistical Commission (NSC). Click here to know more.
  • There were differences of opinion on the methodology adopted for this calculation. Click here to know more.
  • So the final back series data is now jointly released by the CSO and NITI Aayog.

What led to the complication in the earlier report?

  • The CSO faced issues in evaluating GDP with the new base year for years preceding 2011-12 due to lack of availability of the MCA-21 database.
  • MCA-21 is an e-governance initiative of the Ministry of Company Affairs launched in 2006.
  • This was to allow firms to electronically file their financial results.
  • With the shift to the new base year 2011-12, the CSO did away with Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at factor cost.
  • It instead adopted the international practice of valuing industry-wise estimates as gross value added (GVA) at basic prices.
  • Also, the MCA-21 database got used in addition to
  1. the volume index of Index of Industrial Production (IIP)
  2. establishment-based dataset of Annual Survey of Industries (ASI)
  • So the calculation methodology was questioned, and the government termed the committee report 'unofficial'.

What are the highlights of the new report?

  • The back series has trimmed the growth numbers for the UPA government’s two terms (2005-06 to 2008-09 and 2009-10 to 2013-14).
  • Indian economy growth is recorded at an average 6.7% in UPA’s first term as well as the second term.
  • [Significantly, these are lower than the earlier estimates of 8.1% and 7% respectively, with 2004-05 base.]
  • These growth rates compare with an average 7.4% (2011-12 base year) in the first four years of the present NDA government.
  • But the earlier report stated a faster growth under the UPA government from 2004-05 to 2013-14 than during the first four years of the current government.
  • The new back series data released for years preceding 2011-12 scaled down growth rates for 2005-06 to 2013-14 by 0.8 to 2.1 percentage points.
  • For 2012-13, with the new base year (2011-12), the GDP growth rate is revised upwards to 5.5% from 4.7% estimated earlier (2004-05 base year).
  • Likewise, for 2013-14, the GDP growth rate was revised up to 6.4% from 5% estimated earlier.
  • Sharp downward revisions were seen particularly for two years, 2007-08 and 2010-11.
  • For 2010-11, the growth got revised downwards from a double-digit rate of 10.3% to 8.5%.
  • The 8.5% cent growth in 2010-11 is the highest growth rate in the back series dating back to 2005-06.

https://images.indianexpress.com/2018/11/box1.jpg

What are the concerns?

  • Data - The CSO release mentioned usage of several proxies.
  • But there is not enough explanation for the choice of datasets and proxies, especially those datasets that did not exist before 2011-12.
  • E.g. For years preceding 2006, when the MCA-21 database did not exist, the CSO has used Annual Survey of Industries (ASI) data for estimating manufacturing growth.
  • But economists say there could have been other indicators for the same metric.
  • Calculation - The current series is based on company data, MCA-21, which is the balance sheet data (financial).
  • But the back series is based on volume data. E.g. the Annual Survey of Industries data for secondary sector
  • The key difference between the volume index approach and the financial data approach is that the financial data captures changes in quality which volume data does not.
  • So if a substantial part of the growth has been coming from quality, then the volume approach could have potentially underestimated growth.
  • Institution - The CSO comes under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).
  • So the role of the NITI Aayog in the release of the statistical exercise has also been questioned as it goes against convention.

What could the implication be?

  • During earlier instances of backcasting of GDP data, the political environment was not as deeply polarised as it is now.
  • So the exercise remained more academic.
  • But the present data show that India never really grew in double-digits in 2010-11.
  • Also, India is projected not to be the high-growth economy in the five years preceding this as earlier thought to be.
  • It so happens that this period covers the two terms of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government.
  • The political influence in such professional data should seriously be taken note of by the policymakers, in long term interests.

 

Source: Indian Express, The Hindu

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