Syllabus ( पाठ्यक्रम)

UPSC CSE PRE 1. History XI to XII NCERT Old &New Ref Book: Bipin Chandra, Modern Specturm 2. Art& Culture - Nitin Singhania 3. Geography - IX to XII Ncert Ref.Book: Majid hussain,Human geography Video Mrunal natural Phy.

Saturday, July 31, 2021

                                                      *  CURRENT AFFAIRS 31 JULY *

 This forecast for 2021-22 is lower than the 12.5% growth in GDP that IMF had projected in April before the second wave took a grip. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday cut its economic growth forecast for India to 9.5% for the fiscal year to March 31, 2022 as the onset of a severe second COVID-19 wave cut into recovery momentum. This forecast for 2021-22 is lower than the 12.5% growth in GDP that IMF had projected in April before the second wave took a grip. For 2022-23, IMF expects economic growth of 8.5%, larger than the 6.9% it had projected in April. "Growth prospects in India have been downgraded following the severe second COVID wave during March-May and expected slow recovery in confidence from that setback," IMF said in its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO). India's economy is gradually recovering from a deep contraction in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2021 (7.3%) and a subsequent severe second wave of COVID-19. IMF joins a host of global and domestic agencies which have cut India's growth estimates for the current fiscal. Last month, S&P Global Ratings projected a 9.5 % GDP growth in the current fiscal and 7.8 % in 2022-23. While World Bank sees GDP growth at 8.3 % from April 2021 to March 2022, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) last week downgraded India's economic growth forecast to 10 % from 11 % estimated in April. Moody’s Another US-based rating agency Moody's has projected India clocking 9.3 % growth in the current fiscal ending March 2022. For 2021 calendar year, Moody's has cut the growth estimate sharply to 9.6 %. The GDP, which shrank from $2.87 trillion in 2019-20 to $2.66 trillion in the following year, is estimated to reach around $4 trillion in 2024-25. Overall, the global economy is projected to grow 6 % in 2021 and 4.9 % in 2022. The 2021 global growth forecast is unchanged from the April 2021 WEO, but with offsetting revisions, the report said. "The global economic recovery continues, but with a widening gap between advanced economies and many emerging markets and developing economies. "Our latest global growth forecast of 6% for 2021 is unchanged from the previous outlook, but the composition has changed," IMF's Chief Economist Gita Gopinath said in a blog post released along with the WEO. Ms Gopinath said IMF estimates the pandemic has reduced per capita incomes in advanced economies by 2.8 %, relative to pre-pandemic trends over 2020-2022, compared with an annual per capita loss of 6.3 % a year for emerging market and developing economies (excluding China). "These revisions reflect important extent differences in pandemic developments as the delta variant takes over. Close to 40% of the population in advanced economies has been fully vaccinated, compared with 11% in emerging market economies, and a tiny fraction in low-income developing countries," she wrote. "Faster-than expected vaccination rates and return to normalcy have led to upgrades, while lack of access to vaccines and renewed waves of COVID-19 cases in some countries, notably India, have led to downgrades," Ms Gopinath added. The U.S. economy grew solidly in the second quarter, but the pace was below expectations as robust consumer spending and business investment on equipment were tempered by a sharp inventory drawdown amid supply chain constraints. Gross domestic product rose at a 6.5% annualised rate last quarter, the Commerce Department said on Thursday. The economy grew at a 6.3% rate in the first quarter, revised down from the previously reported 6.4% pace. The National Bureau of Economic Research, the arbiter of U.S. recessions, declared last week that the pandemic downturn, which started in February 2020, ended in April 2020. Economic expansion is expected to remain solid for the remainder of this year. A resurgence in COVID-19 infections, driven by the Delta variant, however, poses a risk to the outlook. Higher inflation, if sustained, as well as ongoing supply chain disruptions could also slow the economy. President Joe Biden’s administration provided $1.9 trillion in pandemic relief in March. That brought the amount of government aid to almost $6 trillion since the pandemic started in the U.S. in March 2020. Almost half of the population has been vaccinated against COVID-19, allowing Americans to travel, frequent restaurants and attend sporting events among services-related activities that were curbed early in the pandemic. 

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