India’s GDP numbers for the fourth quarter of 2015-16 are so confusing, they could belong to two different countries. Seen from the lens of how much is being produced, the growth is closer to 8 per cent. From the lens of how much was consumed, it dips below 4 per cent. The second-largest contributor to this growth is ‘discrepancy’. While its composition is unclear, this adjusting figure has surged so that it accounts for half the last quarter’s GDP. But something is still not right: exports have also fallen, as have new investments, and government expenditure just about grew. We live in hope.
The debate over GM crops has been playing out in India. Yet, despite the opposition, NITI Aayog seems keen on pushing for such crops. In a recent round table, NITI Aayog member Ramesh Chand said the organisation has been pleading for a trial of GM crops for farmers. Agreeing that public sentiment on the use of GM crop is still lukewarm, he felt, tongue-in-cheek, that this was partly because scientists in India are not making any promising technological process in the area. Otherwise, the opposition would not have been so strong, you see.