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Home Prime News

“Nepal will see mere 2.3 percent economic growth this fiscal”

CEO TAB by CEO TAB
May 27, 2020
in Prime News
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"Nepal will see mere 2.3 percent economic growth this fiscal"
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May 27 : The country’ economic growth rate will be confined to a mere 2.3 per cent for the current fiscal year 2019-20 due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent national lockdown.

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Presenting the Economic Survey report of the ongoing fiscal on Tuesday (May 26), Finance Minister Yubaraj Khatiwada came up with such a remark

“All key economic indicators like inflation, foreign trade, balance of payments, investment etc have been severely affected by the coronvirus crisis. Thus, the country will see a meager 2.3 percent economic growth this fiscal as opposed to 8.5 percent predicted earlier”.

It may be noted that the lately revised growth rate is still higher than that projected by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) and the World Bank seperately. The CBS has estimated that the country’s growth rate in the current fiscal year will stand at 2.27 percent while the international lending organization has forecast the very rate will remain below two percent this year.

According to the Economic Survey, due to the contraction in both public and private expenditure triggered from the pandemic, the overall investment in the current fiscal will decrease by 3.4 per cent to Rs 1.89 trillion compared to the previous year.

The very survey shows that the country’s tourism sector, which grew at 7.33 per cent last year, will witness negative growth of 16.3 per cent in the current fiscal. Even though the growth rate of other sectors like fisheries, electricity, gas and water, health and social work and public administration and defence will be notable this year, an area like tourism is expected to witness tepid growth due to the pandemic.

Meanwhile, total government expenditure has increased by 12.9 per cent in the first eight months of the current fiscal to Rs 610.68 billion compared to the same period of the previous year. Recurrent expenditure till mid-March stood at Rs 450.78 billion, capital expenditure at Rs 96.48 billion and expenditure under financing at Rs 63.42 billion.

In the current fiscal year, the average income of the countrymen is projected to reach $1,085 per capita per year, up by 7.5 percent compared to that of 2018/19. In the nine months period, the government took public borrowing worth Rs 91.90 billion. It now has a debt burden of Rs 1.13 trillion in total, of which Rs 699 billion is the external loan.

Meanwhile, the per capita income of Nepalis (at current price) has been estimated to increase by 7.5 per cent this year to $1,085 or Rs 126,018 compared to the last year, according to the survey, It also estimates the ratio of gross consumption and gross household savings to GDP to be at 81.9 per cent and 18.1 per cent, respectively, in the current fiscal.

“All economic indicators, including inflation, foreign trade, balance of payments, investment and financial indicators, had been positive before the spread of coronavirus. However, these indicators have been affected since the spread of the virus which will ultimately shrink the overall economic growth rate for the year,” said Khatiwada.

Meanwhile, the per capita income of Nepalis (at current price) has been estimated to increase by 7.5 per cent this year to $1,085 or Rs 126,018 compared to the last year. The survey has also estimated the ratio of gross consumption and gross household savings to GDP to be 81.9 per cent and 18.1 per cent, respectively, in the current fiscal.

The Economic Survey estimates that absolute poverty, which remained at 18.6 per cent in the last fiscal, will, however, come down to 16.67 per cent of the population by the end of the current fiscal although the nationwide lockdown has rendered countless people jobless.

As a result of contraction in both public and private expenditure due to the spread of COVID-19, overall investment in the current fiscal has been projected to decrease by 3.4 per cent to Rs 1.89 trillion compared to the previous year.

The government received foreign investment commitment worth Rs 178 billion in the first eight months of the current fiscal against Rs 11.18 billion foreign investment commitment that the country had received during the same period last year.

As per the survey report, the total government expenditure increased by 12.9 per cent in the first eight months of the current fiscal to Rs 610.68 billion compared to the same period of the previous year. While recurrent expenditure till mid-March stood at Rs 450.78 billion, capital expenditure stood at Rs 96.48 billion and expenditure under financing stood at Rs 63.42 billion.

The government has also estimated that the country’s tourism sector, which grew at 7.33 per cent last year, will witness negative growth of 16.3 per cent in the current fiscal. While the growth rate of fisheries, electricity, gas and water, health and social work and public administration and defence will be notable this year as these sectors have not been adversely affected by the pandemic, all other sectors are expected to witness tepid growth, adds the economic survey report.

It stated that access to electricity had increased to 90 per cent of the population, while 78 per cent of the population had access to electricity till last year.

The report also states that the government constructed 129 bridges till mid-March this year.

While provincial governments blacktopped 3,950 kilometres of roads, the federal government blacktopped 559 kilometres of roads during the given period.

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Manish Raj Poudel
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