Key Points

India's economic landscape is demonstrating remarkable resilience amid global uncertainties. The Bank of Baroda's latest report reveals promising growth indicators across multiple sectors, including services and consumption. Healthy monsoon conditions and improving fiscal metrics are contributing to the positive economic outlook. Despite potential global challenges, India's economic fundamentals appear strong and adaptable.

Key Points: India Economic Growth Steady Amid Global Challenges

  • Consumption demand showing improvement across multiple sectors
  • Services indicators displaying positive activity signals
  • Monsoon performance healthy at 15% above long-term average
  • Central government fiscal deficit easing to 4.5% in May 2025
2 min read

India's economic growth remains on track despite global uncertainties: Report

Bank of Baroda report highlights India's robust economic indicators, positive consumption trends, and resilient rupee performance in Q1 FY26

"In July, the rupee is trading with an appreciating bias - Bank of Baroda Report"

New Delhi, July 11

India's economic growth remains on track amid global uncertainties, with an improvement in high frequency indicators for both services and manufacturing, and consumption picking up momentum during Q1 FY26 versus Q4 of FY25, according to a Bank of Baroda (BoB) report released on Friday.

High frequency data available for the first quarter (Q1) so far shows that consumption demand appears to be improving compared with the last quarter. This is reflective in the rise in steel consumption growth, increase in electronic imports, and higher central government revenue spending, the BoB report states.

Services indicators are also showing a pickup in activity, as can be seen in case of services PMI, vehicle registrations, diesel consumption, revenue collection of states and e-way bill generations.

However, some strains can be seen in performance of 2-wheeler sales, and moderation in consumer durables and FMCG output. However, domestic inflation remains in favour which hints at softer monetary policy which would spur growth, the report adds.

It also highlights that monsoon activity is healthy at 15 per cent above long period avaerage so far (as of July 9) which is expected to give a fillip to the agricultural sector.

The Central government finances are on a solid footing with the fiscal deficit ratio eased to 4.5 per cent as of May 2025 from 4.6 per cent as of April 2025, the report observes.

The report is also positive on the outlook for the rupee. It stated that the rupee depreciated marginally by 0.2 per cent in June after depreciating by 1.3 per cent in May. Easing geo-political tensions and a weaker dollar, led to range-bound trading in the domestic currency in the later part of the month.

"In July, the rupee is trading with an appreciating bias despite lingering concerns over US tariff policies. We expect this trend to continue. Investors remain hopeful of the successful completion of India-US trade deal before the August 1 deadline, which will lend further support to the rupee, the report said.

On the global front, tariff jitters are blindsiding growth-inflation dynamics. With fresh commodity specific and country-specific tariff rates being anticipated, inflationary concerns have again reignited. Recent Fed minutes also highlighted it as a hindrance to monetary policy easing. Based on the underlying murky global backdrop, domestic markets are likely to exhibit some degree of volatility, the report added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the numbers look good, I'm concerned about the 2-wheeler sales decline. This shows middle-class families are still struggling. Growth should be more inclusive - not just about steel and electronics.
A
Aditya G
The rupee stability is crucial! As someone who runs an export business, I've seen how currency volatility affects margins. Hope the India-US trade deal materializes - it could be a game changer for Make in India.
S
Sarah B
Interesting analysis. The services sector pickup aligns with what I'm seeing in Bangalore's tech parks. But the report could have addressed regional disparities - growth isn't uniform across all states.
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Karthik V
Good monsoon = Happy farmers = Strong rural demand. It's that simple! 🚜 The agricultural boost will have ripple effects across FMCG and auto sectors. Just hope the rainfall distribution remains even across regions.
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Nisha Z
The fiscal deficit control is commendable, but I wish the report discussed more about inflation control measures. Petrol prices are still pinching household budgets despite what the numbers say.

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