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India News Updated May 29, 2026

RBI Sees India’s Growth at 6.9% in FY27 Despite West Asia Conflict Risks

The Reserve Bank of India projects India's real GDP growth at 6.9% for 2026-27, highlighting resilience despite West Asia conflict risks. CPI inflation is forecast at 4.6%, up from 2.1% in 2025-26, due to potential crude oil price spikes and supply disruptions. Strong domestic demand, healthy banking sector, and government capex are key growth drivers. The MPC kept the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% in April 2026, adopting a cautious stance amid geopolitical uncertainty.

RBI sees India's growth resilient at 6.9 pc in FY27 despite West Asia conflict risks

Mumbai, May 29

India's economy is expected to remain resilient in 2026-27 despite rising geopolitical tensions and inflationary risks emanating from the West Asia conflict, the Reserve Bank of India said in its Annual Report 2025-26.

The central bank projected India's real GDP growth at 6.9 per cent for 2026-27, while warning that inflationary pressures could intensify due to elevated crude oil prices, supply disruptions and global uncertainty.

"Against the backdrop of a moderate global growth, the outlook for the Indian economy in 2026-27 remains positive, supported by strong macroeconomic fundamentals, although a prolonged West Asia conflict may pose downside risk," the RBI said in the report.

The RBI noted that geopolitical risks have "re-emerged as the dominant drag on global growth in 2026," with the conflict in West Asia leading to upward revisions in global inflation forecasts and downside risks to trade and financial markets.

On inflation, the central bank projected Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation at 4.6 per cent in 2026-27, compared to 2.1 per cent in 2025-26.

"Inflation in 2026-27 is likely to remain aligned with the target... however, the evolving upside risks to inflation may emanate from multiple other factors such as spike in global fuel and commodity prices amid geopolitical tensions," the report said.

The RBI also warned about possible spillovers to input and wage costs along with exchange-rate volatility.

Despite the uncertain global environment, the report highlighted India's strong domestic demand conditions, healthy banking sector and sustained government capital expenditure as key growth drivers.

"The healthy balance sheets of the corporate and banking sectors along with the government's continued thrust on capital expenditure bode well for India's strong growth trajectory," it said.

India remained the fastest-growing major economy during 2025-26, with GDP growth estimated at 7.6 per cent against 7.1 per cent in the previous year.

The report said the country's growth was supported by "strong domestic consumption, sustained investment, proactive policy initiatives and sound macroeconomic fundamentals."

On the fiscal front, the RBI underscored the Centre's continued consolidation efforts. The gross fiscal deficit (GFD) for 2025-26 stood at 4.4 per cent of GDP, below the government's medium-term target of 4.5 per cent.

For 2026-27, the Centre has projected fiscal deficit at 4.3 per cent of GDP.

"GFD is projected at 4.3 per cent of GDP in 2026-27, reflecting the Centre's continued fiscal consolidation efforts in recent years," the report noted.

The annual report also suggested that the RBI may adopt a cautious approach on future monetary policy easing amid evolving inflation risks.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) had reduced the policy repo rate by 100 basis points during 2025-26 as inflation moderated sharply.

However, in April 2026, the MPC unanimously decided to keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.25 per cent while retaining a "neutral" stance.

"With the growth-inflation outlook remaining delicately poised amid heightened geopolitical risks, the MPC... decided to keep the policy repo rate unchanged," the report said.

The RBI added that global central banks may increasingly face the challenge of balancing inflation control with growth concerns amid recurring supply shocks and geopolitical instability.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Good to see fiscal deficit below 4.5% target. But 4.6% inflation worry me - as a homemaker, I already see prices of dal and vegetables climbing. Government must ensure benefits reach common man, not just big corporations.

Rohit P

RBI playing it smart by keeping rates unchanged. Growth is strong but we can't be reckless with inflation. West Asia conflict is a wildcard - hope our diplomacy keeps us out of direct trouble. 🇮🇳

Kavya N

As someone working in exports, the exchange rate volatility comment is concerning. Rupee depreciation hits our margins hard. But glad to see India still fastest-growing major economy - shows our resilience. Let's hope the global situation stabilises soon.

James A

Impressive numbers from India despite global headwinds. The 7.6% growth last year is remarkable. But I wonder how sustainable this is if West Asia tensions escalate. RBI's cautious stance makes sense.

Vikram M

While I appreciate the optimism, common man still feels the pinch. Inflation at 4.6% might be 'target aligned' on paper, but ground reality is different for those with limited incomes. Hope the government's capex push actually creates jobs.

S Sarah B Interesting We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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