Key Points

Fitch Ratings has revised India's growth forecast downward to 6.4% for 2025-26, amidst global trade tensions. The agency also lowered global growth expectations, citing severe trade war escalations. Key economies, including the US and China, are experiencing reduced growth prospects due to these uncertainties. The global economic outlook remains weak, with policy uncertainties impacting business investments and household wealth worldwide.

Key Points: Fitch Lowers India Global Growth Forecast Amid Trade Uncertainty

  • Fitch cuts India's growth to 6.4% for 2025-26
  • Global growth forecast reduced by 40 basis points
  • Trade wars impact world economies including US and China
  • Massive policy uncertainty hurts business investments
2 min read

Fitch lowers India's and global growth forecast amidst trade uncertainties

Fitch cuts India's growth forecast due to global trade tensions, impacting economies worldwide.

"US 'Liberation Day' tariff hikes were far worse than expected. - Fitch"

New Delhi, April 17

Fitch Ratings has lowered India's growth forecast for 2025-26 by 10 basis points to 6.4 per cent. For 2026-27 the growth forecast is lowered by 20 basis points to 6.3 per cent.

The Reserve Bank of India also recently lowered the growth forecast for the current fiscal 2025-26 to 6.5 per cent from 6.7 per cent, amid uncertainties arising from trade wars following the reciprocal tariffs announced by the US.

The global rating agency has similarly revised downwards growth rates for several economies, including France, the UK, Eurozone, Australia, Canada, Germany, China, the US, among a few others.

Fitch Ratings' forecasts for world growth have been sharply lowered in response to the recent severe escalation in the global trade war.

"US 'Liberation Day' tariff hikes were far worse than expected," said Fitch.

"Massive policy uncertainty is hurting business investment prospects, equity price falls are reducing household wealth and US exporters will be hit by retaliation," it added.

The Fitch quarterly Global Economic Outlook (GEO) cuts world growth in 2025 by 40 basis points and China and US growth by 50 basis points.

US annual growth is expected to remain at 1.2 per cent for 2025 but will slow to a crawl through the year at just 0.4 pere cent in October-December 2025.

China's growth is expected to fall below 4 per cent both this year and next, while growth in the eurozone will remain stuck well below 1 per cent.

World growth is projected to fall below 2 per cent this year; excluding the pandemic, this would be the weakest global growth rate since 2009.

In the US, Fitch expects the Federal Reserve to wait until October-December 2025 quarter before cutting rates despite the deteriorating US growth outlook.

"Import prices are set to rise sharply and there has been an alarming jump in US households' medium-term inflation expectations in the past two months. However, the surprising weakening of the US dollar has created more space for other central banks to ease and we now expect deeper rate cuts from the ECB and in emerging markets," Fitch said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is concerning but not entirely unexpected. The trade wars were bound to have global repercussions. India needs to focus more on domestic consumption and less on exports in this climate. 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
China below 4% growth? That's huge! Maybe this will finally push them to be more cooperative in trade negotiations. The global economy is too interconnected for these trade wars to continue.
A
Arjun S.
While I understand the concerns, I think Fitch might be being overly pessimistic. India's fundamentals remain strong and we've weathered worse storms before. The RBI has tools to manage this.
S
Sunita P.
The article mentions inflation expectations rising in the US - that's the real danger here. If inflation becomes entrenched globally, central banks will have their hands tied. Scary times ahead 😟
V
Vikram J.
Respectfully, I think the article could have explained more about how India specifically is affected by these trade wars beyond just the growth numbers. What sectors are most vulnerable?
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Neha R.
The silver lining here is that India's growth is still projected to be above 6% while others struggle to reach 1%. We're doing something right! Just need to maintain our momentum 💪

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