India's Economy Resilient Amid Global Trade Turmoil, Says Economic Survey

The Economic Survey 2025-26 states that India's economy remains resilient despite global trade disruptions from unilateral tariffs and geopolitical tensions. It notes that while global trade policy is increasingly driven by security concerns rather than rules, India's strong domestic fundamentals have offset external headwinds. The Survey highlights a paradox where India's stellar macroeconomic performance collides with a global system that no longer rewards such success with currency stability or steady capital inflows. Nevertheless, it projects a steady growth outlook supported by domestic demand, healthy balance sheets, and ongoing reform momentum.

Key Points: India Resilient to Global Trade Shocks: Economic Survey

  • Resilient to global tariff shocks
  • Strong domestic fundamentals cushion economy
  • Rupee undervalued amid global risk aversion
  • Export diversification offsets US market pressure
3 min read

India well placed amid tariff shocks, global fragmentation: Economic Survey

India's Economic Survey highlights resilience against global tariff shocks and fragmentation, citing strong domestic fundamentals and steady growth outlook.

"Growth is good; the outlook remains favourable; inflation is contained; banks are healthy; and corporate balance sheets are strong. - Economic Survey 2025-26"

New Delhi, January 29

Even as global trade faces renewed disruption from unilateral tariff actions and rising geopolitical tensions, India's economy has demonstrated resilience, with strong domestic fundamentals helping offset external headwinds, the Economic Survey 2025-26 has said.

The Survey notes that the global economic environment has become increasingly uncertain, with trade policy now shaped more by strategic and political considerations than by multilateral rules.

"Trade policy is now shaped primarily by security and political considerations rather than efficiency or multilateral rules," it observed, warning that the global system has become "less coordinated, more risk-averse, and more exposed to non-linear outcomes."

Referring to recent tariff actions by the United States, the Survey recalled that the announcement of additional penal tariffs on Indian exports came as a surprise, especially when India was expected to be "one of the early winners in the new tariff regime of the United States."

The developments led to downward revisions in growth forecasts and heightened volatility in global markets.

However, the Survey underlined that India's growth momentum remained intact. "Growth is good; the outlook remains favourable; inflation is contained; banks are healthy; and corporate balance sheets are strong," it stated, adding that policy dynamism and structural reforms helped sustain economic activity despite external pressures.

At the same time, the document highlighted a broader paradox confronting the economy.

"The paradox of 2025 is that India's strongest macroeconomic performance in decades has collided with a global system that no longer rewards macroeconomic success with currency stability, capital inflows, or strategic insulation," it said.

The Survey pointed out that heightened global uncertainty, driven by trade conflicts, geopolitical realignments and weakening rule-based systems, has had a visible impact on capital flows and investor sentiment. Financial markets, it noted, tend to react first, with uncertainty triggering a wait-and-see approach that delays investment and raises risk premia.

According to the Survey, emerging market economies are more vulnerable to such uncertainty. While global trade growth is projected to slow sharply in 2026, "trade policy uncertainty is likely to have a more pronounced impact on the trade volumes of EMDEs than on those of advanced economies."

For India, the external risks manifest less as immediate macroeconomic stress and more as intermittent pressure on exports, capital flows and currency stability. The rupee, the Survey observed, "does not accurately reflect India's stellar economic fundamentals" and is "punching below its weight," partly due to global risk aversion.

Nevertheless, the Survey underlined that an undervalued currency has also helped cushion the impact of higher American tariffs on Indian goods. At the same time, India's export sector has shown adaptability, with diversification toward alternative markets helping maintain overall export growth even as shipments to the US moderated in certain sectors.

Looking ahead, the Survey cautioned that the principal risk lies not in any single external shock but in prolonged global fragmentation. "Fragility, uncertainty and episodic shocks are increasingly structural features of the system," it noted.

Despite these challenges, the Survey maintained an optimistic outlook, projecting steady growth supported by domestic demand, healthy balance sheets and sustained reform momentum. "The outlook, therefore, is one of steady growth amid global uncertainty, requiring caution, but not pessimism," says the survey.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The part about the rupee "punching below its weight" is so true. Our fundamentals are strong but global sentiment is holding us back. Hopefully, continued reforms and stability will eventually be recognized. The export diversification is a smart move.
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Aman W
Cautious optimism is the right approach. The global situation is messy, but India has a strong domestic base. My only concern is whether this growth is reaching the common man. Inflation may be 'contained' but prices of essentials are still a pain point for my family.
S
Sarah B
Interesting read from an international perspective. The shift from multilateral rules to political/security-driven trade is a global worry. India's ability to adapt its export markets is a lesson in economic agility. The long-term risk of fragmentation is real for everyone.
V
Vikram M
The US tariff surprise shows we can't take any friendship for granted in trade. Time to double down on FTAs with other regions and strengthen our own manufacturing ecosystem. Jai Hind!
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Karthik V
The Survey is right about the paradox. We are doing well but not getting the full rewards in terms of currency strength or capital flows. It's a test of patience. The key is to not get distracted and keep the reform momentum going. Solid analysis.

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