India's 8.2% GDP growth raises sustainability concerns

India recorded an 8.2% GDP growth in the second quarter, driven by strong manufacturing and services sectors. However, the International Monetary Fund has assigned a 'Grade C' to the country's national income accounting practices, highlighting structural weaknesses. This assessment underscores questions about the long-term sustainability of the growth amid uneven sectoral performance.

India's economy expanded by 8.2% in the second quarter of 2024-25, with projected output reaching ₹48.63 lakh crore. This growth reflects genuine momentum, as real Gross Value Added rose from ₹82.88 lakh crore to ₹89.41 lakh crore across agriculture, industry, and services. Manufacturing grew by 9.1%, indicating increased industrial demand and higher factory capacity utilization. The services sector, comprising 60% of GDP, advanced 9.2%, with financial services up 10.2% due to robust credit activity and urban demand.

Private Final Consumption Expenditure increased by 7.9%, signaling stronger household spending. Agriculture saw a 3.5% rise, aided by fuller reservoirs and better horticulture yields, contributing to modest rural income improvements. Nominal GDP grew 8.8%, keeping inflation in check, which eased below target levels by the end of 2024-25. Banks supported this with significant credit expansion, maintaining excess capital buffers. Fiscal consolidation continued through strong GST and direct tax collections, while the external sector stayed stable with a small current account deficit and healthy services exports.

Despite these positives, challenges persist. The IMF's 'Grade C' rating points to flaws in national income accounting, including an outdated 2011-12 base year, reliance on wholesale price indices for deflators, excessive single deflation, discrepancies between production and expenditure approaches, lack of seasonally adjusted data, and incomplete state-level data post-2019. Mining output stagnated at 0.04% due to a prolonged monsoon, and electricity generation grew only 4.4% amid a mild winter reducing demand. Sectoral shares show primary at 14%, secondary at 26%, and tertiary at 60%, but employment remains skewed toward low-productivity agriculture and services.

The Reserve Bank of India notes risks to exports from trade protectionism and geopolitical tensions. While the rupee appeared stable, it faced pressures from a strong U.S. dollar and volatile foreign capital flows. These factors suggest that while short-term growth is robust, institutional and structural reforms are needed for sustained progress.

संबंधित लेख

Illustration of India's Economic Survey 2025-26 tabling in Parliament, highlighting GDP growth, reforms, manufacturing revival, and PM Modi's approval.
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India's economic survey 2025-26 highlights growth and reforms

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India's Economic Survey 2025-26, tabled in Parliament on January 30, 2026, projects robust GDP growth amid global uncertainties and recommends key reforms for strategic resilience. It emphasizes manufacturing revival, digital curbs and policy overhauls to bolster economic stability. Prime Minister Narendra Modi praised it as a roadmap for inclusive development.

The National Statistics Office has forecasted a 7.4% growth for the Indian economy in 2025-26, surpassing earlier expectations. While the first half of the year saw 8% expansion, the second half is expected to moderate to 6.8%. Services sector leads the acceleration, though nominal growth raises fiscal worries.

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आरबीआई के अधिकारियों ने कहा कि अर्थव्यवस्था की निकट अवधि की दृष्टि अनुकूल बनी हुई है और उच्च विकास गति को बनाए रखने के लिए अच्छी स्थिति में है। यह उपभोग, निवेश और उत्पादकता बढ़ाने वाले सुधारों से प्रेरित है। मुद्रास्फीति लक्ष्य के निकट रहने की उम्मीद है।

The International Monetary Fund has raised its 2026 growth projection for China to 4.5 percent, up 0.3 percentage points from its October forecast, due to eased trade tensions and sustained domestic policy support. China's 2025 growth forecast was also revised upward by 0.2 percentage points to 5 percent. The changes reflect stimulus measures and additional policy bank lending for investment.

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Japan's real gross domestic product grew at an annualized rate of 0.2% in the October-December quarter of 2025, falling short of market estimates. Preliminary data from the Cabinet Office showed a 0.1% quarter-on-quarter rise, marking the first positive growth in two quarters. The full-year growth rate for 2025 reached 1.1%, the highest since 2022.

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that Colombia's economy grew 2.6% in 2025, below expectations of 2.8%. In the fourth quarter, GDP expanded 2.3%, driven by household consumption, the public sector, and cultural activities like concerts. Investment fell 2.9%, the lowest level in two decades.

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Official data from the National Bureau of Statistics shows China's GDP grew 5 percent year-on-year in 2025, reaching 140.19 trillion yuan and surpassing the 140 trillion yuan threshold for the first time. Carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP fell 5 percent, while air quality continued to improve.

 

 

 

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