English, asked by rananaman2580, 8 months ago

Write a short paragraph on the topic economic crisis during COVID-19​

Answers

Answered by harshan20
5

Explanation:

The economic impact of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic in India has been largely disruptive. India's growth in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year 2020 went down to 3.1% according to the Ministry of Statistics. The Chief Economic Adviser to the Government of India said that this drop is mainly due to the coronavirus pandemic effect on the Indian economy. Notably India had also been witnessing a pre-pandemic slowdown, and according to the World Bank, the current pandemic has "magnified pre-existing risks to India's economic outlook".

Answered by ruby94
4

Explanation:

The economic impact of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic in India has been largely disruptive. India's growth in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year 2020 went down to 3.1% according to the Ministry of Statistics. The Chief Economic Adviser to the Government of India said that this drop is mainly due to the coronavirus pandemic effect on the Indian economy. Notably India had also been witnessing a pre-pandemic slowdown, and according to the World Bank, the current pandemic has "magnified pre-existing risks to India's economic outlook".

Economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in India

IMF World Economic Outlook April 2020 Real GDP growth rate (map).svg

Map showing real GDP growth rates in 2020, as projected by the IMF.

Date

March 2020 – present

Type

Global recession

Cause

COVID-19 pandemic-induced market instability and lockdown

Outcome

Sharp rise in unemployment

Stress on supply chains

Decrease in government income

Collapse of the tourism industry

Collapse of the hospitality industry

Reduced consumer activity

Plunge in fuel consumption. Rise in LPG sales.

The World Bank and rating agencies had initially revised India's growth for FY2021 with the lowest figures India has seen in three decades since India's economic liberalization in the 1990s. However after the announcement of the economic package in mid-May, India's GDP estimates were downgraded even more to negative figures, signalling a deep recession. (The ratings of over 30 countries have been downgraded during this period.) On 26 May, CRISIL announced that this will perhaps be India's worst recession since independence. State Bank of India research estimates a contraction of over 40% in the GDP in Q1 FY21. The contraction will not be uniform, rather it will differ according to various parameters such as state and sector.

Within a month, unemployment rose from 6.7% on 15 March to 26% on 19 April.[1] During the lockdown, an estimated 14 crore (140 million) people lost employment while salaries were cut for many others.[1][2] More than 45% of households across the nation have reported an income drop as compared to the previous year.[3] The Indian economy was expected to lose over ₹32,000 crore (US$4.5 billion) every day during the first 21-days of complete lockdown, which was declared following the coronavirus outbreak.[4][5] Under complete lockdown, less than a quarter of India's $2.8 trillion economic movement was functional.[6] Up to 53% of businesses in the country were projected to be significantly affected.[7] Supply chains have been put under stress with the lockdown restrictions in place; initially, there was a lack of clarity in streamlining what an "essential" is and what is not.[8] Those in the informal sectors and daily wage groups have been at the most risk.[9] A large number of farmers around the country who grow perishables also faced uncertainty.[8]

Vendor of greens, essential supply chains and logistics. Life under lockdown. Bangalore spring 2020.

Major companies in India such as Larsen & Toubro, Bharat Forge, UltraTech Cement, Grasim Industries, Aditya Birla Group,BHEL and Tata Motors have temporarily suspended or significantly reduced operations. Young startups have been impacted as funding has fallen.[10][11] Fast-moving consumer goods companies in the country have significantly reduced operations and are focusing on essentials. Stock markets in India posted their worst loses in history on 23 March 2020.[12] However, on 25 March, one day after a complete 21-day lockdown was announced by the Prime Minister, SENSEX and NIFTY posted their biggest gains in 11 years.[13]

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