RBI Governor Amid Covid19 Coronavirus Pandemic

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The RBI Governor said there will be a gradual revival in economic activity by second half of FY-2021
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) expects the country's GDP or gross domestic product to
contract in the current financial year, Governor Shaktikanta Das said on Friday, as he announced a reduction in the repo rate by 40 basis
points to 4 per cent
GDP growth will be in the negative territory in 2020-21, Mr Das said in his first address to the media after the government unveiled a
fiscal and monetary stimulus worth Rs 20.97 lakh crore to support the economy's fight against the coronavirus pandemic and the weeks-long
lockdown
Friday's moves were aimed at countering the economic fallout from an ongoing nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus
pandemic
The COVID-19 crisis and the ongoing nationwide lockdown, with few exceptions, have impacted the economy and uncertainty
surrounding the pandemic continues to loom, the RBI Governor said."The outbreak of coronavirus has disrupted economic activities," he said
(Read Shaktikanta Das's full statement)Mr Das however expressed confidence of a gradual revival in economic activity and demand by the
second half of the current financial year, which ends in March next year."GDP growth in 2020-21 is estimated to remain in the negative
territory with some pick up in growth impulses in the second half of 2020-21 onwards," he said.The RBI Governor said the combination of
fiscal, monetary and administrative measures being currently undertaken by both the government and RBI will create conditions for a gradual
revival of economic activities in the second half of 2020-21.The surprise moves by the RBI on key interest rates and the extension of a loan
moratorium by three months - which allows banks to defer loan payments from borrowers - came days after the government detailed monetary and
fiscal support worth a total Rs 21 lakh crore.  The RBI chief said the global economy is heading into recession, and the domestic
inflation outlook is "highly uncertain". Headline inflation "may remain firm" in the first half of 2020-21 and ease in the remaining part
of the financial year. "Domestic economic activity has been impacted severely by the two-month lockdown," he said
He also highlighted that the top-six industrialised states that account for 60 per cent of the country's industrial output are largely in
the red and orange zones.High-frequency indicators point to collapse in demand, and there is a plunge in demand for electricity and
petroleum productions. The biggest blow is to private consumption, which accounts for 60 per cent of domestic demand, the RBI Governor
said.The combined impact of demand compression and supply disruption will depress economic activity in the first half of the current fiscal
year.