City
Epaper

Lower inflation, reduced interest rates to boost private consumption in FY26: Report

By IANS | Updated: January 8, 2025 18:20 IST

New Delhi, Jan 8 Healthy farm incomes should provide support to rural incomes next fiscal (FY26) and lower ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Jan 8 Healthy farm incomes should provide support to rural incomes next fiscal (FY26) and lower inflation and scope for reduced interest rates should improve purchasing power for discretionary spending in India, a report showed on Wednesday.

This fiscal, real private consumption growth revived to 7.3 per cent from 4 per cent last fiscal.

“What’s salutary is that some factors that support consumption recovery in the short term have also turned supportive,” according to a Crisil Market Intelligence and Analytics report.

This fiscal, growth in government consumption expenditure rebounded to 4.1 per cent from 2.5 per cent last fiscal, supporting private consumption growth recovery.

Over the past few fiscals, government revenue spending on welfare schemes, such as NREGA, rural roads and housing construction, generated employment and bolstered rural demand in the immediate term.

In FY26, for private consumption to remain strong, government spending must focus on employment generating schemes that put incomes in the hands of those with a higher propensity to consume.

“A combination of such spending on asset-creating schemes (rural roads, affordable housing and National Rural Employment Guarantee Act works) and furthering government capital expenditure or capex on infrastructure (railways, highways and ports) could moderate the inflation impact of such spending.

“If the supporting factors kick in, the pick-up in private consumption growth could be preserved next fiscal,” the report noted.

This fiscal, the agriculture economy did better with healthy southwest rains and robust kharif harvest. Good soil moisture and abundant reservoir levels are benefiting the rabi crop as well.

“The government’s first advance estimates show agriculture GVA growing 3.8 per cent this fiscal, which will support rural incomes and demand,” the report mentioned.

Next fiscal, assuming the recent La Nina effect that has just set in positively impacts the southwest monsoon, and there are fewer, less-disruptive weather disturbances, we expect agriculture output and incomes to remain healthy and continue aiding rural consumption, it added.

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

Other SportsEngland obliterate South Africa in historic ODI triumph

FootballLamine Yamal or Ousmane Dembele?: Rodri picks his Ballon d'Or 2025 winner

NationalArunachal youths motivated to don uniform, serve nation as Agniveers: Army

Other SportsHyrox Mumbai delivers a record-breaking fitness spectacle

InternationalKarachi youth kidnapped, assaulted by fake iPhone buyers

Business Realted Stories

BusinessBJP MPs urge manufactures, traders to pass on GST rate cut to consumers

BusinessHyundai Motor advises employees to postpone US trips following immigration raid

BusinessMaharashtra’s AURIC industrial smart city poised to create over 62,400 jobs

BusinessTaxpayers urged to file ITRs as Sep 15 deadline nears

BusinessExporters to meet RBI chief for easier loan terms amid US tariff hike