India's GDP Growth Revised to 7.6% for 2025-26 After Base Year Update

India's Ministry of Statistics has revised the GDP growth estimate for 2025-26 upward to 7.6% following a change in the base year for national accounts to 2022-23. The revision incorporates improved data from annual household surveys and updated deflation methods, leading to mixed sectoral adjustments. While the secondary sector saw a slight upward revision, the services sector experienced a significant downward adjustment of 2 percentage points. The Chief Economic Adviser expressed confidence that the economy has sufficient momentum to achieve the 7.3% growth required in the fourth quarter to meet the full-year target.

Key Points: India's 2025-26 GDP Estimate Revised Up to 7.6%

  • Base year updated to 2022-23
  • Secondary sector growth revised up 0.2%
  • Services sector growth revised down 2%
  • Q4 2025-26 needs 7.3% growth to hit target
3 min read

Base year switch boosts 2025-26 GDP estimate to 7.6%

India revises GDP growth forecast to 7.6% for 2025-26 after switching its national accounts base year to 2022-23, with sectoral adjustments.

"I think the momentum in the economy is good enough to deliver the 7.3 per cent growth rate in the fourth quarter. - V. Anantha Nageswaran"

New Delhi, February 27

India's latest base year revision of national accounts has led to an upward adjustment in GDP growth estimates for 2025-26. The government said that the use of annual surveys for household sector estimates and change in method of deflation improved the GDP estimates.

At the sectoral level, the primary sector, comprising agriculture, mining and related activities, saw a marginal downward revision of 0.1 percentage point in growth. The government indicated that there was no significant change in real estimates overall, though crop sector growth was revised upward.

The secondary sector, which includes electricity, manufacturing and construction, recorded a 0.2 percentage point upward revision.

Growth was revised higher for segments such as electricity, gas, water supply and remediation services, along with manufacturing of optical products, coke and refined petroleum products, iron and steel, and food products.

In contrast, the tertiary or services sector experienced a 2 percentage point downward revision in growth.

Revisions in trade and repair services, air transport, communication and transport-related services were made.

The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) released the New Series of Annual and Quarterly National Accounts Estimates with a base year of 2022-23, which replaces the previous series with a base year of 2011-12.

The Financial Year (FY) 2022-23 has been selected as the base year, as it represents a recent normal year (after COVID), with availability of robust and comprehensive data across sectors of the economy, making it an appropriate benchmark for the new series of Annual and Quarterly National Accounts Estimates.

The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation is revising the base year for key macroeconomic indicators--CPI, GDP, and IIP. In late 2025, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) assigned India a 'C' rating on national accounts, citing outdated data. The base year was perceived to be outdated by the IMF.

India's real GDP is estimated to grow by 7.6 per cent in the current financial year 2025-26, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) estimates showed Thursday. Under the old series, the GDP was estimated to grow 7.4 per cent in the current financial year.

Overall economic performance in 2025-26 is primarily on account of robust real growth observed in the second quarter (8.4 per cent) and the third quarter (7.8 per cent). In the October-December quarter, the economy grew 7.8 per cent, in real terms, data showed.

In the January-March quarter, the economy is estimated to grow 7.3 per cent.

"We expected, or anticipated growth rate has to be 7.3 per cent or more in Q4 (2025-26) to be able to achieve the full year real GDP growth rate of 7.6 per cent," Chief Economic Adviser to the Government of India, V. Anantha Nageswaran, said. "I think the momentum in the economy is good enough to deliver the 7.3 per cent growth rate in the fourth quarter."

Under the new series, the GDP estimates for next year, 2026-27 has also been raised to 7-7.4 per cent, as against the projected 6.8-7.2 per cent growth in the recently tabled Economic Survey document.

The Indian economy has exhibited sustained performance, recording real GDP growth rates of 7.2 per cent and 7.1 per cent respectively during 2023-24 and 2024-25. According to official data, the economy grew 8.7 per cent and 7.2 per cent, respectively, in 2021-22 and 2022-23.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
While the headline number looks good, I'm concerned about the 2% downward revision in the services sector growth. That's a huge adjustment! Services employ so many people. Does this mean job creation in IT, hospitality, and trade wasn't as strong as we thought?
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Arjun K
The IMF 'C' rating was an embarrassment. Glad the government acted on it. Using a normal post-COVID year as the base makes perfect sense. Hope this leads to better policy decisions. However, I wish the agricultural sector revision was more positive. Our farmers need to see that growth.
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Sarah B
As an analyst, this is a crucial technical improvement. The change in deflation method and use of annual household surveys should reduce estimation errors. The upward revision in growth for refined petroleum and iron & steel aligns with what we see on the ground. Good step for data credibility.
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Vikram M
Numbers are one thing, but does the common person feel this 7.6% growth? My grocery bill and petrol prices tell a different story. I respect the statistical work, but hope this growth translates to better prices and more money in our pockets soon. 🙏
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Karthik V
The revision for next year's projection to 7-7.4% is the real takeaway. It shows sustained confidence. The Q2 and Q3 numbers mentioned (8.4% and 7.8%) are solid. If we can keep this momentum, India is firmly on track to become a $5 trillion economy. Jai Hind!

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