City
Epaper

Crisil revised India's FY26 GDP growth to 6.5% on good monsoon, rate cuts, and rural support

By ANI | Updated: July 1, 2025 14:53 IST

New Delhi [India], July 1 : Rating agency Crisil has revised India's gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 6.5 ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], July 1 : Rating agency Crisil has revised India's gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 6.5 per cent for the current fiscal, supported by expectations of above-normal monsoon, rate cuts and the government's rural support schemes.

The India Meteorological Department sees the above normal monsoon, and the arrival of the southwest monsoon is expected to boost agricultural production. The department expects above-normal monsoon for fiscal 2026 at 106% of the long-period average. It will aid discretionary spending, noted the report.

Crisil also expects another rate cut in the current fiscal year, which is likely to further boost domestic demand.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has already cut rates by 100 basis points in the ongoing easing cycle, which has led banks to soften lending rates.

The growth in output in investment-related goods reflects a healthy rise in the government's (centre plus states) capex in May.

Central government capex rose 38.7 per cent (nominal terms) in May, and data for 17 major states indicate that cumulative capex surged 44.7 per cent on-year in May.

Investment-related goods performed well in May, output growth in infrastructure and construction goods picked up 6.3 per cent vs 4.7 per cent.

Additionally, "Income tax cuts and expected spending on rural support schemes as announced in the budget for fiscal 2026, too, will support private consumption," noted the rating agency.

However, the report adds that tariff hikes are likely to hit goods exports, "the announced reciprocal tariffs (by the US administration) are expected to come into effect from July 9. The tariff hikes are likely to hit goods exports in fiscal 2026, while private investments may be impacted by global uncertainty."

For the month of May, growth in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) softened to 1.2 per cent on-year in May from 2.6 per cent in April, marking its lowest level since August 2024. A contraction in the electricity sector and softer growth in manufacturing were the factors weighing down on IIP in May.

Along with consumer-oriented and electricity sectors, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and textiles reflected a decline in output on-year. On the other hand, investment-related goods experienced a more positive growth trend, and Export-oriented sectors displayed a mixed performance.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessGold loan NPAs of NBFCs at 2.14 pc, banks at 0.22 pc

NationalRajasthan: Second army recruitment rally to commence at Sikar from Aug 25

BusinessApparel Group Brand R&B Fashion Unveils a New Concept Store in Mumbai, India

National1,345 claims, objections filed by individual electors disposed in Bihar: ECI

BusinessIndia's Best Design Students 2025 - Recognising the Next Generation of Design Leaders

Business Realted Stories

BusinessMeghavi Wellness Launches India's First 'Air Spa Lounge' at Mumbai Airport T2, Redefining Wellness in Transit

BusinessChipsets with our own IP a key objective towards Viksit Bharat: Ashwini Vaishnaw

BusinessGST reforms booster: Sensex surges 676 points, Nifty gains 245 points

BusinessMoglix Marks Independence Day by Making Khatema Fibres a Safer, More Progressive Workplace

BusinessEZTax's AI-Driven Self-Service ITR Portal Redefines Indian Tax Filing Experience