India has moved beyond green shoots, economy already revived: PMO Principal Secy PK Mishra
New Delhi, June 29
India's economy has already revived, with the latest quarterly and annual Gross Domestic Product data reflecting the economy's revival, Principal Secretary to the Prime Minister, PK Mishra said on Monday, asserting that the country has moved well beyond the stage of "green shoots."
Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of the 20th National Statistics Day celebrations in New Delhi, Mishra said, "It has already revived. You see, the last growth data, the last quarterly data, the annual data, the GDP has certainly revived."
When asked whether the economy was witnessing "green shoots", he replied, "Yes, green shoots, it is already revived, much better than green shoots."
Mishra made the remarks in response to a question on whether global geopolitical tensions and their impact on the world economy, including India, could affect the country's economic outlook. He maintained that the latest GDP figures already indicate that the Indian economy has staged a recovery.
Emphasising the importance of evidence-based policymaking, Mishra said the Prime Minister has consistently stressed that the vision of Viksit Bharat should be driven by data and measurable outcomes.
"Our Prime Minister has said that we need to have data-based decision-making. So for Viksit Bharat, whatever efforts we make, whatever initiatives we take, whatever schemes we work out, it should be evidence-based, it should be data-driven. To use data, we need to measure it, measure the indicators and measure the progress. That is how Viksit Bharat is to be measured," he said.
Speaking about this year's Statistics Day theme, "Unlocking the Potential of Administrative Data for Decision-Making," Mishra said India now has access to large volumes of administrative data generated by government departments, various ministries and the country's Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI).
He said the focus is on standardising such data, making it compatible across systems and improving its quality so that it becomes trusted, comprehensive and compatible with traditional survey data, while expanding the scope of official statistics.
"Administrative data now, we have a lot of departments, a lot of initiatives, and we have a huge Digital Public Infrastructure. A lot of data is generated by our digital activities. Various ministries have also generated a lot of data. The question is how to use this potential, how to standardise it, how to make it compatible with each other, how to derive inferences from the data and how to improve the data so that it is trusted, comprehensive and compatible with the earlier survey data," he said.
Highlighting the role of emerging technologies, Mishra said Artificial Intelligence (AI) offers significant opportunities to make decision-making more comprehensive through better use of data.
However, he stressed that India must simultaneously develop the human capability to effectively use AI and ensure that the results generated by such technologies are properly validated.
"AI has a lot of scope. It gives a lot of opportunities to use data to make our decisions more comprehensive. At the same time, we need to develop the human capability to use AI and also ensure that whatever the results are, they are validated," Mishra said.
— ANI
Reader Comments
I appreciate the emphasis on data-driven decision-making. As someone who works in policy analysis, I know how crucial reliable data is. But we need to ensure that the administrative data being collected reaches the grassroots. Many rural areas still lack proper digital infrastructure. Hope the Viksit Bharat vision is inclusive for all states.
I'm an NRI living in Canada, and I see the Indian economy growing from the outside. Exports are up, infrastructure is improving, and startups are booming. But the domestic news often seems more negative. Maybe the government needs to communicate the revival better? The data speaks for itself—6-7% GDP growth is no joke.
Sir ji, please don't just look at GDP numbers. Look at the real economy: small businesses are still recovering from COVID, farmers are facing loan problems, and the youth are competing for limited jobs. I agree data matters, but it should show the ground reality too. Viksit Bharat needs to be felt in every village, not just in Delhi offices.
The AI angle is interesting! If we can standardize administrative data and use AI properly, we could really transform policymaking. My husband works in data science, and he says India is sitting on a gold mine of data from UPI, GST, and Aadhaar. But privacy concerns remain—we need strong safeguards. Hope the government is careful with all this data.
I moved to Bangalore from the UK for work, and I can see the energy here. Yes, there are challenges, but the optimism is palpable. PK Mishra is right to highlight the revival—the IT sector, manufacturing, and services are
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