Indian economy grows to 6%
India’s central bank governor Bimal Jalan said recently the country’s
economic growth was likely to be between 5.5 and 6.0 percent in
the year to March 2002.
The Press Trust of India quoted Jalan
saying the worldwide slowdown would not significantly affect the
Indian economy and that growth at the end of the year would be
among the highest in the world.
He said India’s inflation was currently
hovering at about three percent and was much better than most
countries of the world.
Latest figures show that India’s
growth dropped to 5.2 percent last fiscal year, the lowest since
the launch of decade-oil reforms, and lower than the budget target
of seven percent set for the year.
Analysts have said they doubt India
would be able to achieve the 6.5 percent growth target the government
set for the current fiscal year following last year’s sharp fall.
They say India’s growth rate could
fall we below last year’s 5.2 percent figure after further slowing
of industries in the first six months of 2001.
Demand is still weak in India’s main
export markets of the United States and Europe.
PHDCCI urges flexible lending
norms for SSIs
PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry
(PHDCCI) has urged banks and financial institutions (FIs) to frame
transparent norms and adopt flexible approach to extend financial
assistance to small scale industries (SSIs).
"Banks should extend financial assistance
to corporate, particularly SSIs, at economic cost and without
hassles of collateral and guarantees," the chamber said in a statement.
In order to ensure a practical approach
to the assessment of working capital requirement, the chamber
suggested that the calculation should be based on estimated working
capital requirement and not on the maximum permissible bank finance.
Suggesting review of the current
practice of covering guarantee by full security as required in
case of working capital for exports, the PHDCCI said banks should
not insist on 100 percent margin for guarantee to a government
department. The margin in these cases should not exceed 25 percent.
Pakistani exports surpass
Pakistani exports grew by more than six percent to 9.143 billion
dollars during the fiscal year that ended last month, bringing
down the national trade deficit, officials said recently.
The Pakistani statistics bureau said
exports registered an increase of 6.7 percent over the 8.569 billion
dollars posted in 1999-2000.
Cotton and its derivatives remained
the leading contributor to Pakistan’s foreign trade but leather
exports also showed a robust jump during 2000/01.
Raw cotton exports soared 92 percent
to 139 million dollars; finished leather exports were up 30 percent
to 228 million dollars and shipments of leather products increased
19 percent to 405 million dollars.
The statistics agency reported a
marginal increase of 2.6 percent in exports of textile goods to
5.7 billion dollars during the fiscal year, which ended on June
30.
The better export performance helped
Pakistan reduce its trade deficit to 1.52 billion dollars from
1.75 billion dollars in 1999/2000, the bureau said.
Economists believe the high cost
of oil imports in the past 12 months impeded the military government’s
efforts to cut the trade deficit by more.
Of the total 10.30 billion dollars
spent on imports, Pakistan’s soil bill accounted for 3.3 billion
dollars in 2000/01, up 18 percent from the previous year.
Amadeus signs with Bangladesh
Biman
The world’s largest and the advanced global distribution system
(GDS) company, Amadeus, has signed an agreement with Bangladesh
Biman recently.
The participating carrier agreement’
as it is termed, will enable Biman to put its inventory and schedule
on the Amadeus GDS system so that customers can make real time,
online booking from anywhere in the world.
Speaking to ET from Bangladesh, Ankur
Bhatia, director, Indian sub continent, Amadeus India, said, "we
have about 200,000 outlets running our application across the
world, with about 4,000 in India. Customers can log in from any
of these countries to find out about flight schedules and flight
availability. They can even do online bookings for their chosen
flights, which would immediately get updated in our, as well as
the airline’s database." While Biman is expected to get more visibility
and access to the global markets through this agreement, it would
have to shell out $ 3 per materialised booking that takes place
through Amadeus’ GDS.
Sri Lankan economy in trouble
Sri Lanka’s war-battered economy is headed for more trouble because
of political instability and a severe energy shortage, the central
bank said recently.
Economic growth in the first quarter
of this year was sharply lower at 1.3 percent from a year earlier
compared with 6.6 percent in the same period last year, bank official
said.
"The expected slower growth was largely
due to slowing down of economic activities in industrial countries,
which crippled the demand for manufactured exports", the bank
said in a statement.
The Central bank had forecast 4.5
percent GDP growth in calendar year 2001 compared with 6.0 percent
in 2000, but economists said the latest political developments
have made their original projections too optimistic.
The country is facing 90 minute power
cuts as the state run electricity utility is unable to meet demand
due to a shortage of water in hydro-electricity generating reservoirs.
Compounding the problems is political
uncertainty since the main opposition attempted to topple the
government in April when a vote was taken on the national budget.