India’s GDP Growth – Strong Real Expansion Amid Nominal Slowdown and Data Transition

India’s first advance estimate of GDP for 2025-26 projects a sharp rise in real GDP growth to 7.4%.

India’s GDP Growth

India’s GDP Growth Latest News

  • India’s first advance estimate of GDP for 2025-26, released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI), projects a sharp rise in real GDP growth to 7.4%.
  • This is driven mainly by a rebound in manufacturing and resilient services, despite external shocks such as 50% US tariffs on Indian goods. 
  • However, nominal GDP growth is projected to slow to 8%, a five-year low, raising fiscal and budgetary implications ahead of the Union Budget 2026-27.

Key Highlights of the First Advance Estimate

  • Real vs nominal GDP growth:
    • Real GDP growth (2025-26) – 7.4% (up from 6.5% in 2024-25).
    • Nominal GDP growth – 8% (lowest in five years, excluding pandemic year).
    • Gap between real and nominal growth – 60 basis points, lowest since 2011-12.
    • This indicates low inflationary pressures or weak price growth.
  • Size of the Indian economy:
    • Nominal GDP (2025-26) – ₹357 lakh crore.
    • At an exchange rate of ₹89.89/$, GDP equals $3.97 trillion, just short of the $4-trillion economy milestone.
    • Significance: India nearing $4 trillion economy despite global volatility.
  • Sector-wise performance (supply side / GVA):
    • Manufacturing: Growth rebounds to 7% (from 4.5% last year). Despite US tariffs, domestic demand and supply-side resilience remain strong.
    • Agriculture: Growth moderates to 3.1% (from 4.6%). This reflects normalisation after a strong previous year.
    • Construction: Growth at 7% (down from 9.4%) – still robust due to infrastructure push.
    • Services: Strong expansion at 9.1% driven by new-age services, GST rate cuts (in September), and robust services exports.
  • Expenditure-side trends (demand side):
    • Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE): Growth at 7% in 2025-26 as against 7.2% in 2024-25.
    • Gross Fixed Capital Formation (Investment): It is expected to rise 7.8%, up from 7.1% growth seen last year.
    • Government Consumption Expenditure: It makes up less than a tenth of India’s GDP, and is expected to see its growth rate more than double to 5.2% this year from 2.3% in 2024-25. This is led mainly by State government spending.
  • Second-half slowdown:
    • The first advance estimate implies that GDP growth in October-December 2025 and January-March 2026 will average 6.9%, sharply down from the 7.8% and 8.2% growth rates recorded in the first two quarters.
    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which raised its GDP growth forecast for the year by 50 bps last month to 7.3%, expects the economy to grow by 7% in October-December 2025 and 6.5% in January-March 2026.

Implications for Union Budget 2026-27

  • The first advance estimate of GDP for the year is used by the Ministry of Finance for its Budget calculations. 
  • The Role of nominal GDP: Nominal GDP growth is a critical input for tax revenue projections, fiscal deficit targets, and debt-to-GDP ratio. Slower nominal growth may constrain fiscal space, and affect revenue buoyancy.
  • Example:
    • Budget 2025-26 assumed 10.1% nominal GDP growth to fix the fiscal deficit at 4.4% of GDP.
    • Actual nominal growth (8%) fell short, but the absolute GDP target was met due to revisions.

Major Structural Change – New GDP Series

  • Shift in base year:
    • This first advance estimate will have a short shelf life because GDP data released February 27 onward will be as per a new series with a base year of 2022-23 as against 2011-12 now. 
    • Updating the base year is key to a correct picture of the economy.
  • Shift includes: New data sources, improved methodologies, and updated benchmarks.
  • Importance: Reflects structural transformation of the Indian economy.
  • Caution by MoSPI: Estimates will undergo frequent revisions, users must interpret data carefully.
  • GDP revisions timeline: The GDP growth figure for 2025-26 will continue to undergo revisions after the second advance estimate is published on February 27, with the final number available only in February 2028.

Challenges Highlighted and Way Ahead

  • Slowing nominal GDP growth: This indicates fiscal management challenges. Maintain fiscal prudence amid lower nominal growth.
  • Second-half economic slowdown: Sustain manufacturing momentum through PLI and export diversification. Strengthen investment cycle via public capex and crowding-in private investment.
  • Agricultural growth moderation: Boost agricultural productivity to stabilise rural demand.
  • External uncertainties (tariffs, global volatility): Continue structural reforms to support medium-term growth (6.5–7%).
  • Frequent data revisions may affect policy consistency: Leverage data reforms for evidence-based policymaking.

Conclusion

  • The first advance estimate for 2025-26 underscores the resilience of the Indian economy, with robust real GDP growth of 7.4% despite global headwinds. 
  • However, the sharp deceleration in nominal GDP growth raises concerns for fiscal planning and revenue mobilisation. 
  • As India transitions to a new GDP series with an updated base year, policymakers must balance growth support, fiscal discipline, and reform momentum to navigate uncertainties in 2026-27 and beyond.

Source: IE

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India’s GDP Growth

Q1. How does the divergence between real and nominal GDP growth in 2025-26 impact fiscal management in India?+

Q2. What is the significance of the manufacturing sector rebound in India’s GDP growth for 2025-26?+

Q3. Why is nominal GDP growth a crucial assumption in the Union Budget formulation?+

Q4. What is the rationale behind revising India’s GDP base year from 2011-12 to 2022-23?+

Q5. What explains the expected second-half slowdown in India’s GDP growth during 2025-26?+

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