With no sign of the economy recovering,
India’s GDP for the June quarter grew by 4.4 percent, the lowest in the last
four years.
The
country’s economy had grown by 5.4 percent in same period of the previous
fiscal.
India’s
economy grew declined to 5 percent in 2012-13 from 6.2 percent in 2011-12. The
economy had grown by 8 percent for two consecutive years prior to that.
While
manufacturing and mining sectors have been one of the reasons behind the fall
in the GDP, the fall in rupee, which hit a record low of 68.85 earlier this
week, is seen as one of the major factors too.
Addressing
the Parliament on Friday prior to the announcement of the GDP growth, Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh assured the country on the rupee and economy stating
that the economy would grow by 5.5 percent in the current fiscal.
“There
is no reason to believe that we are going down the hill and that 1991 is on the
horizon,” the prime minister said in the Rajya Sabha.
He
also asserted that India was now heading back to a 1991-like crisis when the
country was forced to pledge its gold to pay import bills.
India’s
gross domestic product growth of five percent in the financial year ended March
31, 2013 was the lowest in a decade.
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