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IIP’s funny numbers: Time to dump them lock, stock, barrel
by R Jagannathan Mar 12, 2012
So, the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) has punched in at 6.8 percent in January. 2012. Three cheers for an industrial revival?
Actually, we should give the index three boos for producing nonsensical numbers.
The broad numbers are certainly not off the mark. The big growth engines of January were Manufacturing, which grew by a robust 8.5 percent, and Electricity, which rose 3.2 percent. Mining, which has been a bit under the weather for all of 2011 due to scams and bans, declined by 2.7 percent.
The IIP numbers seem to be in contradiction with ground realities
Overall, the IIP has given us a moderate 4.0 percent growth in the April 2011-January 2012 period.
But look under the covers, and what you find is a can of worms.
Industrial growth is being driven by consumption, with consumer goods zooming by 20.2 percent, especially consumer non-durables by 42.1 percent. Consumer durables – fridges, ACs etc – are actually declining by 6.8 percent.
What’s going on? Are Indian consumers buying up toothpaste, soap, and food like they are going out of fashion?
Seems so.
Exhibit A is “Food products and beverages”, which showed 92.6 percent growth in January. Indians are either eating too much now or they were eating too little in January 2011. How did this happen? Have the rich forgotten about weight-watching, or are the poor eating better? If this is true, we should forget about food security and worry about only those pockets where malnutrition is chronic.
Exhibit B is “Printing, publishing and reproduction of recorded media”, which grew a spectacular 56.1 percent. Are people reading more newspapers and watching more TV for some reason? The data suggest that most publications and channels are bleeding, and advertisers are holding back on spends. Or are people spending more on entertainment and CDs – which is what recorded media could be about? Nobody has told us that people are watching more films or things like that.
Exhibits A and B are also valid for April-January 2011-12, since they reported 28.3 percent and 24.2 percent growth. So this is not some isolated trend restricted to a January blip.
Exhibits C, D and E relate to what is falling in the IIP: “Office, accounting and computing machinery” (-14.1 percent), “Electrical machinery and apparatus” (-30.5 percent), and “Radio, TV and communication equipment and apparatus” (-13.8 percent).
Surely, there is a contradiction between exhibits A and B, and what C, D and E show.
Can India be buying more recording media and consuming more entertainment and news if office and computing machinery are going down, and if radio, TV and computing equipment are crashing?
This is not to suggest a one-to-one correlation between related products every month, but at the very least there is a clear need to look at the data afresh and see if the right things are being collected and collated.
Let’s also look at some of the other numbers – going even deeper into specific products. January has shown a 127.3 percent increase in “Zarda/chewing tobacco”. Either people are taking up more bad habits as the economy dives downhill, or the data gatherers were smoking something when entering the data.
“Marble tiles and slabs” reported 69.4 percent growth during January. Now, we didn’t hear of any real growth in the real estate sector in January in any part of the country. So how did marble tiles and slabs show this spike in growth? Who is buying marble tiles when the money being invested in realty is going down? Or have the data gatherers lost their marbles? (If you are a glutton for numbers, here’s the full monty from the government’s data website).
Newspaper production went up 57.1 percent in January. Oh? People are now eagerly reading newspapers, or are the poor using more newspapers to cover themselves in a cold winter since they can’t afford woolen blankets?
The official release announcing the January IPP also notes a 246 percent rise in petroleum coke, lenses (72 percent, the population is either taking to photography in a big way or more people are developing myopia), and insulated cables/wires of all kinds (up 57.5 percent). Since cables and wires are largely used in homes and offices, one wonders why this is happening in a flat or negative real estate scenario.
There is only one point to be made: the IIP numbers are simply yo-yoing too much and appear too lumpy to be really believable. Somebody needs to take a close look at the whole index, and audit the process through which data is being collected.
Meanwhile, the current IIP is worth taking with bags of salt. However, we don’t advise that, since salt might show a big spike in the next IIP number.
Best to throw out the flawed current IIP with the bathwater.
WASHINGTON: Even as overall growth in the G20 slowed in the fourth quarter of 2011, growth increased strongly in India and Indonesia, modestly in the United States, but slowed somewhat in China, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The G20 Quarterly Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of +0.7 per cent in the last three months of 2011 compared with +0.9 per cent in the third quarter, according to provisional results from this first time release of the G20 GDP aggregate.
In 2011 as a whole, G20 GDP rose by +2.8 per cent, a marked deceleration compared with the +5.0 per cent growth recorded in 2010.
The G20 GDP aggregate masks diverging patterns among the world's largest economies, IMF said noting in India and Indonesia growth increased strongly from + 0.9 per cent to + 1.8 per cent and from + 1.4 per cent to + 2.1 per cent respectively.
However in terms of annual per centage change and per centage change on the same quarter of the previous year India's growth rate fell from 7 per cent in the third quarter to 6.5 per cent in the fourth quarter.
In the United States, GDP growth increased to +0.7 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2011, compared with +0.5 per cent in the third quarter, but slowed in China to +2.0 per cent, compared with +2.3 per cent in the third quarter.
In Japan, economic growth decreased to -0.2 per cent, following the strong rebound (+1.7 per cent) in the third quarter. GDP fell by -0.3 per cent in both the European Union and the euro area in the fourth quarter of 2011, the first fall since the second quarter of 2009.
India's per capita income increased to 1527 USD
Per capita of Luxembourg(1st) is 122,272...we have a long way to go..
Per capita of our neighbours-
Maldives- 6,499
Thailand- 5,281
China- 5,184
Indonesia- 3,461
Sri Lanka- 2,864
Bhutan- 2,299
Pakistan- 1,164
Burma- 804
Bangladesh- 690
Nepal- 644
Bharti Airtel, India's largest mobile phone company by revenues and customers may kick start its fourth generation services from Kolkata on March 20, executives familiar with the development told ET.
This would be the second launch of 4G services in India after Augere Wireless, which has been offering high-speed data through dongles (data cards) since last month.
The Bharti Airtel spokesperson declined to comment, but pointed out that its chief executive Sanjay Kapoor had recently said that the telco would launch 4G services by March-end.
Bharti Airtel had paid Rs 3,314.36 crore for getting fourth generation spectrum in four circles - Maharashtra, Karnataka, Punjab and Kolkata - in a government auction held in 2010.
ET had earlier reported that Bharti had fininalized vendors for its 4G foray, with ZTE being supplying the equipment and managing operations in Kolkata, while Nokai Siemens gor Maharashta, Huawei for the Karntaka region and Sweden's Ericsson for Punjab.
Ford India, subsidiary of US carmaker Ford, on Thursday said it aims to accelerate export of India made-Figo to 50 international markets by this year end, from current 34.
Figo continues to be a favourite in export markets. The company has exported 2,389 units this month including to a new market — Lebanon, an official said, on the sidelines of foundation stone-laying ceremony of Ford’s integrated manufacturing facility here.
“We are exporting Figo to Mexico, Caribbean, UAE, and parts of North Africa. The vast majority goes to similar markets like India, as they too need small cars like India does,” President and Managing Director, Ford India, Mr Michael Boneham said.
In addition to South Africa and Nepal, Figo is being shipped to countries like Angola, Bermuda, Ghana, Iraq, Liberia, Malawi, Madagascar, Mauritius, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
“We have already gone to 34 different countries and aim to export to 50 nations by end of this year, many of them being similar countries,” Mr Boneham said.