The Confederation of Indian Industry has pegged the requirement for investment at Rs 280 lakh crore ($4.7 trillion) for five years beginning 2014-15 to make the economy grow by seven per cent a year on an average.
The requirement is double the Rs 139 lakh crore ($2.9 trillion) investments made in the previous five years.
The economy grew 6.7 per cent a year on an average in the previous five years.
The estimates, given in a CII study titled ‘Investment requirements in India: 2014/15 to 2018/19’, are based on an assumption of a incremental capital-output ratio of 5.
At this, CII expects total investment requirement (at 2004-05 prices) to be Rs 126 lakh crore ($2.1 trillion), higher than Rs 100 lakh crore ($2.08 trillion) investments in the previous five years.
The exchange rate is taken as Rs 60 to a dollar for five years, starting the current financial year.
Converting it into current prices, CII arrived at the figure of Rs 280 lakh crore (Rs 280 trillion).
The study has assumed inflation (based on the deflator used to calculate gross domestic product) to average six per cent a year in 2014-15 to 2018-19.
In its 12th five-year Plan document, the Planning Commission has estimated the investment requirement at current prices during the Plan period (2012-13 to 2016-17) to be Rs 208 lakh crore ($3.5 trillion).
CII expects industrial growth to pick up to an annual average of at least 6.3 per cent in the coming five years.
Correspondingly, it expects agriculture and services to register yearly average growth of four per cent and 7.95
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