ЁЯСНRise in government capital spending pushes investments up by 53% – The Hindu

Clipped from: https://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/rise-in-government-capital-spending-pushes-investments-up-by-53/article66374631.ece

Fresh investments have surged 53% to тВ╣21.14 lakh crore so far in 2022-23, according to Projects Today; a 61% sequential rise in government capex in Q3 neutralised the 41% drop in private investments

Construction personnel at work on the costal road construction site in Mumbai on December 30, 2022. | Photo Credit: AFP

A sharp 61.2% sequential┬аrise in capital spending┬аby the Central and State governments lifted fresh investment plans announced in the third quarter (Q3) of 2022-23 to тВ╣7.1 lakh crore, even though private sector investments dropped 41% from тВ╣6.31 lakh crore in Q2 to тВ╣3.71 lakh crore between October and December 2022.

Despite a 15.5% quarter-on-quarter decline in new investment plans in Q3 of the year, total investment projects in the first nine months of 2022-23 have crossed тВ╣21 lakh crore, 53.2% higher than 2021-22 and nearly 2.5 times the investment plans announced in the pre-COVID year of 2019, as per the latest projects survey by investment monitoring firm Projects Today.

The number of new projects announced in 2022-23 is 7,555, a tad lower than the 7,978 projects in the first nine months of 2021-22. But big-ticket private investments and higher capex outlays from government agencies lifted the total investment to тВ╣21,14,773 crore compared to тВ╣13,80,540 crore over the same period a year earlier.

тАШWait-and-watch policyтАЩ

Private sector investment project numbers dropped from 3,585 projects in April to December 2021 to 2,787 in 2022-23 so far, but the value of investments was тВ╣13.6 lakh crore, almost 38% higher than 2021-22.

тАЬThe fall in the number of private projects shows that a number of private companies, despite experiencing high-capacity utilization and having enough resources, are adopting a wait-and-watch policy to unravel their capex plans. Rising input costs, hardening interest rates and the slowdown expected in developed economies are the headwinds making mid-size Indian companies go slow on their investment plans,тАЭ Projects Today CEO and director Shashikant Hegde told┬аThe Hindu.

Confidence booster

However, the scale of the total fresh capex commitments made during Q1-Q3 this year should not only raise the confidence level of foreign investors but also make the mid-size Indian companies, who are not investing heavily currently, line up their investment plans in 2023-24, he pointed out.

In the first nine months of 2019-20, new investments worth тВ╣8.68 lakh crore had been announced, with the private sector accounting for less than half of the outlays. In Q1 to Q3 of 2021-22, private sector investments constituted 71.4% of total investments, with their share declining slightly to 64.3% in 2022-23 as government capex has nearly doubled year-on-year to тВ╣7.55 lakh crore.

States still struggling

тАЬWhile fresh investments so far this year have grown an impressive 143% over pre-pandemic levels, we do not see a corresponding increase in number of new projects during the same period as they remained almost at par with such figures for Q1-Q3/FY20,тАЭ noted Mr. Hegde. That the number of new infrastructure projects by State government agencies have seen a major fall signals that States have not yet fully emerged from the pandemic-induced financial crunch, he said.

Also read |Credit challenges: On credit flow and all-round capital spending

Barring the mining sector, which saw a 28% dip in investments year-on-year, all other major sectors posted positive growth in terms of fresh investments during the first nine months of 2022-23. Outlays for irrigation projects rose nearly five times, but over a low base from 2021-22, while investments in electricity, manufacturing and infrastructure, grew 64%, 55% and 50.6%, respectively.

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