India's domestic policy to support growth, broader economy remains robust: Experts

IANS April 28, 2025 183 views

India's economic landscape appears promising with experts highlighting robust domestic policy support. The industrial sector shows resilience with a 4% growth projection for the fiscal year. Tax cuts, lower crude prices, and a potential normal monsoon are expected to bolster economic performance. The Reserve Bank of India's accommodative stance further strengthens the positive economic outlook.

"Stable core sectors, resilient tax revenues, and benign inflation provide a supportive backdrop for sustained growth" - Mahendra Patil, MP Financial Advisory Services
New Delhi, April 28: India's domestic policy is likely to support growth as the income tax cuts come in force this fiscal and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) continues with rate cuts, industry experts said on Monday, as pick-up was seen in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) to 3 per cent in March from 2.9 per cent the previous month.

Key Points

1

Government capex driving infrastructure recovery

2

Export sectors showing positive momentum

3

RBI maintains accommodative monetary stance

4

Industrial production stabilizes at 4% growth

The power sector output grew by a more robust 6.3 per cent growth during the month while the mining sector proved to be a laggard with a mere 0.4 per cent growth in March, according to data released by the Ministry of Statistics.

"Another year of normal monsoon, and lower crude prices will also cushion the impact of external headwinds," said Dharmakirti Joshi, Chief Economist, Crisil Limited.

Infrastructure and construction goods led the recovery (8.8 per cent IIP growth in March compared to 6.8 per cent previous month), indicating government capex catching up towards the end of fiscal 2025.

Durables also recovered (6.6 per cent compared to 3.7 per cent), underscoring improving consumer purchasing power with food inflation easing.

Export-oriented sectors such as textiles, machinery and petroleum products saw growth improve, which could be due to frontloading of shipments ahead of reciprocal tariffs kicking in.

The new-age exports segments -- computers and electronic products -- saw growth surge (21.5 per cent vs 11.2 per cent), again likely due to frontloading, said Joshi.

Mahendra Patil, Founder and Managing Partner, MP Financial Advisory Services, said the FY25 IIP growth of 4 per cent reflects a stable industrial performance amid broader economic normalisation.

"While industrial growth has moderated, the broader economy remains robust, albeit slightly softer than the previous year. Stable core sectors, resilient tax revenues, and benign inflation provide a supportive backdrop for sustained growth into FY2026. With inflation under control, the RBI has further headroom to maintain an accommodative stance, provided external volatilities do not escalate significantly," he noted.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Great to see positive indicators across multiple sectors! The growth in infrastructure and construction is particularly encouraging. Hope this translates to more jobs and better wages for workers. 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
While the numbers look good, I'm concerned about the mining sector lagging behind at just 0.4%. We need balanced growth across all sectors for sustainable development. The government should focus on reviving mining too.
A
Amit S.
The 21.5% growth in computers and electronics is amazing! Shows India's potential in tech manufacturing. Make in India seems to be working well in this sector. Keep it up!
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Neha P.
As someone working in consumer durables, I can confirm we're seeing better sales this quarter. People seem more confident about spending now that inflation is under control. Hope this trend continues!
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Sanjay T.
I appreciate the balanced view in this article - showing both the positives and areas needing improvement. The mention of external volatilities is important too. Global factors can quickly change our economic outlook.

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