India on course to 6 p.c. growth, higher rate after recovery: RBI

September 11, 2009 05:01 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 06:53 am IST - Hyderabad

The Reserve Bank of India on Friday said the country is unlikely to return to a high growth rate till the global economy comes out of the recessionary phase, but maintained GDP rate of 6 per cent is on course.

“The economy is unlikely to revert back to trend growth soon, as recession in the advanced economies would persist with global growth projected to contract by 1.4 per cent by the IMF with a more sizeable fall in world trade by 12 per cent,” the RBI deputy governor Usha Thorat said at a seminar here.

“The Indian economy is expected to grow by 6 per cent as per the latest assessment made by the RBI. GDP growth in the first quarter of 2009-10 (6.1 per cent) is broadly consistent with that”, she added.

The global economic crisis, she said, has lowered India’s growth rate from 9 per cent in 2007-08 to 6.7 per cent in 2008-09, mainly due to falling exports and shrinking foreign liquidity.

“The current focus is to bring back the economy to the high growth path as a key means to ensure higher living standard for all,” Ms. Thorat said.

The RBI in its monetary policy forecasts the economy would grow at 6 per cent with an upward bias this fiscal, a rate that’s in tandem with the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council chairman C Rangarajan’s projection of 6 to 6.5 per cent.

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