Key Points

The RBI's latest bulletin confirms India's economic resilience with 6.5% growth in 2024-25. Agriculture and services sectors are performing strongly while inflation remains under control. India's PMI expansion outpaces other major economies despite global trade uncertainties. The report highlights stable financial conditions and robust forex reserves as key strengths.

Key Points: RBI Says India Economy Resilient Amid Global Uncertainties

  • Agriculture and services sectors show broad-based growth
  • Headline inflation stays below target for fourth month
  • PMI expansion highest in India among major economies
  • Forex reserves remain robust despite global volatility
3 min read

India's economy remains resilient amid spike in global uncertainties: RBI

RBI report highlights India's 6.5% growth, strong PMI, and easing inflation despite global trade and geopolitical tensions.

"India’s growth reaffirmed at 6.5% in 2024-25 with significant sequential pickup in Q4 – RBI Economic Bulletin"

New Delhi, June 25

Various high-frequency indicators for May 2025 point towards resilient economic activity in India across the industrial and services sectors amid the elevated global uncertainty, according to the RBI’s monthly economic bulletin released on Wednesday.

Agriculture showed a broad-based increase in production across most major crops during 2024-25. The domestic prices situation remains benign with headline inflation staying below the target for the fourth consecutive month in May, the report states.

It also highlights that financial conditions remained conducive to facilitate an efficient transmission of rate cuts to the credit market.

The report states that the global economy is in a state of flux, reeling from the twin shocks of trade policy uncertainties and a spike in geo-political tensions.

However, on the domestic front, the provisional estimates released in May have reaffirmed India’s growth to be 6.5 per cent in 2024-25, with a significant sequential pickup in Q4. Various high-frequency indicators for May point to signs of resilient economic activity across the industrial and services sector.

In fact, among the countries surveyed for the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), overall expansion in activity was the highest in India with the expansion in new export orders witnessed in May being an outlier, amidst contraction seen in other major economies. Capacity utilisation by manufacturing firms remained above its long-period average.

High-frequency indicators of aggregate demand for May also suggested a pick-up in rural demand, especially given the strong performance of the agricultural sector. Forward-looking surveys of consumer sentiments show stable consumer confidence for the current period and improved optimism about the future. All of these indicate considerable resilience of the Indian economy, notwithstanding the global economic, trade, and geopolitical uncertainties, the RBI bulletin points out.

It also highlights that domestic inflation remains benign with headline inflation remaining below the target for the fourth consecutive month in May. Record domestic crop production in 2024-25 agricultural season is translating into a sharp and sustained easing of food price inflation. Steady core inflation, with indications of some softening after excluding the impact of volatile and elevated gold and silver prices, indicates that underlying inflationary pressures remain muted, according to the report.

It also highlights that equity markets registered modest gains during May-June, notwithstanding fluctuating movements caused by global cues on economic outlook, tariff related news and the evolving domestic scenario. With the flaring up of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, the equity market registered a brief sharp fall before witnessing a significant rebound on June 20.

The RBI bulletin further states that although credit growth decelerated in April – notably in the agriculture and services sectors – non-bank sources of credit, including external commercial borrowing (ECB) inflows continued to be healthy, although it moderated from March. Overall, financial conditions remained conducive to facilitate an efficient transmission of rate cuts to the credit market.

It also points out that the external sector continued to be robust, with adequate forex reserve cover for imports and external debt.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Great to see our economy holding strong despite global challenges! 🇮🇳 The agricultural growth is especially promising for rural India. Hope this translates to better farmer incomes and reduced migration to cities. RBI's handling of inflation deserves praise too.
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Priya M.
While the numbers look good, I'm concerned about how this growth is distributed. In my hometown, small businesses are still struggling with high input costs. The RBI should ensure credit reaches MSMEs effectively. The headline numbers don't always reflect ground realities.
A
Amit S.
PMI numbers being highest in India is a proud moment! 🚀 But we must remain cautious - global uncertainties can impact us anytime. Need to focus more on manufacturing and reduce dependence on imports, especially from China. Make in India must get stronger!
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Neha T.
As someone working in exports, I can confirm the positive trends mentioned. Our orders have increased 30% YoY. But infrastructure bottlenecks at ports need urgent attention - sometimes we lose business due to delays. Hope the government addresses this soon.
V
Vikram J.
Good news but let's not celebrate too early. The stock market volatility shows how vulnerable we are to global shocks. Also, while inflation is down, common people are still feeling the pinch of high prices for essentials. More focus needed on price stabilization.
S
Sunita P.
The agricultural growth is heartening! As someone from a farming family, I hope the benefits actually reach farmers. Often middlemen take most profits. Government should strengthen direct market access for farmers through eNAM and other platforms. Jai Kisan! 🙏

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