KP Namboodri’s: God’s own tooth powder
The 95-year-old ayurvedic brand KP Namboodri’s, a household name in Kerala, credits its success to Lord ...
The resurgence of Covid-19 has dented but not debilitated economic activity in the first half of Q1 (April-June) FY22, according to an article in the Reserve Bank of India’s latest monthly bulletin.
Although extremely tentative at this stage, the central tendency of available diagnosis is that the loss of momentum is not as severe as at this time a year ago, it added.
“The ferocity of the second wave has overwhelmed India and the world. War efforts have been mounted to stop the second surge in its tracks,” according to the article, ‘State of the Economy’, put together by 18 RBI officials, including Deputy Governor MD Patra.
They estimated that real economy indicators moderated through April-May 2021 as many States imposed restrictions to arrest the renewed surge in infections.
The authors observed that the biggest toll of the second wave is in terms of a demand shock – loss of mobility, discretionary spending and employment, besides inventory accumulation, while the aggregate supply is less impacted.
The authors opined that the impact of the new infections appears to be U-shaped. Each shoulder of the U represents sectors that are weathering the storm – agriculture at one end and IT on the other.
“On the slopes of the U are organised and automated manufacturing on one side and on the other, services that can be delivered remotely and do not require producers and consumers to move.
“These activities continue to function under pandemic protocols,” the article said.
According to the authors, in the well of the U are the most vulnerable – blue collar groups who have to risk exposure for a living and for rest of society to survive.
The aforementioned groups include doctors and healthcare workers; law and order; and municipal personnel; individuals eking out daily livelihood; small businesses, organised and unorganised – and they will warrant priority in policy interventions.
The authors underscored that: “It is in this direction that the Reserve Bank, re-armed and re-loaded, has stepped out. This is the beginning. There is more work to be done.”
As per the article, the data show that the wave is shifting from big cities to small towns and villages where testing is low and health infrastructure poor, and this is where the country must refocus our efforts and energies to put down the virus.
“The key lesson from the visitation of the second wave is vaccinate, vaccinate, vaccinate...The road ahead is fraught with danger, but India’s destiny lies not in the second wave, but in life beyond it,” said the authors.
Get more of your favourite news delivered to your inbox
The 95-year-old ayurvedic brand KP Namboodri’s, a household name in Kerala, credits its success to Lord ...
Many launch an #OrderDirect campaign as an alternative model to food aggregators. But is it really feasible?
Reduce aerospace imports; build synergy
A global alliance of top multinational companies hopes to fast-track funding in sustainable aviation fuel
The pandemic has taught many money management lessons. Here are key takeaways from the survey
Nifty can test the nearest support at 14,500 level if it continues recent fall
Select stocks of companies with good managements, robust balance sheets and reasonable valuations
The company has the potential to ride the upcoming industrial 3D printing wave
Proceeds from Saffronart’s auction to go to seven NGOs
Scrolling through Facebook, I notice a friend’s post about the toxicity of small, lighted screens. But I’m ...
On May 15, 1941, New York Yankees baseball star Joe DiMaggio started a 56-game streak of at least one hit in ...
With the sale of physical books dropping in pandemic-induced lockdowns, publishing houses are looking at ways ...
Many launch an #OrderDirect campaign as an alternative model to food aggregators. But is it really feasible?
The 95-year-old ayurvedic brand KP Namboodri’s, a household name in Kerala, credits its success to Lord ...
Indian Railways, which has been connecting humanity with joy, can become a brand as valuable as the IPL
Facebook gets it right with ad themed on vaccine hesitancy
Three years after its inception, compliance with GST procedures remains a headache for exporters, job workers ...
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives of companies are altering the prospects for wooden toys of ...
Aequs Aerospace to create space for large-scale manufacture of toys at Koppal
And it has every reason to smile. Covid-19 has triggered a consumer shift towards branded products as ...