Brokerage house Credit Suisse today said the October-December quarter GDP reading of 4.5 per cent is possibly "under-recorded".
"In our view, there are some reasons to believe that the GDP growth is being under-recorded as none of the published survey data point to anything like the kind of weakness that was reported yesterday," the investment bank's economist Robert Prior-Wandesforde said in a note to his clients.
"The Q3 GDP growth is the lowest number since the March quarter of 2009, which was the height of the global financial crisis, when GDP rose just 3.5 per cent," he said.
Mr Prior-Wandesforde pointed to a recent Dun & Bradstreet survey that showed business optimism rising from around the middle of the past year.
Yesterday evening, the government released the Q3 GDP numbers, which reported a worse-than-expected growth rate of 4.5 per cent in the three months to December.
GDP had grown 6 per cent in the same period last fiscal year. With this the economic growth in the first nine months stood at a poor 5.1 per cent, a decadal low, against 6.6 per cent a year ago.
Credit Suisse also said a breakdown of the Q3 GDP data is better than the headline numbers, saying "all these numbers need to be taken with a sizable pinch of salt given the frequency and scale of revisions that can be made."
Terming the 6.1 per cent rise in the services sector as "the real shock," Mr Prior-Wandesforde said this is the lowest since the March quarter of 2001.
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