India’s Economic Survey said that the country must build “strategic indispensability” as it heads into FY27, with global trade and capital flows now shaped by tariffs and economic statecraft.
The Survey projects real gross domestic product growth of 6.8% to 7.2% in FY27, and puts FY26 growth at 7.4% in the First Advance Estimates, with domestic demand driving activity.
It says India’s macro position remains strong, but the external setting has changed. Chief Economic Adviser V Anantha Nageswaran writes that India’s performance “has collided with a global system that no longer rewards macroeconomic success with currency stability, capital inflows, or strategic insulation.”
The Survey says policy credibility and execution now act as strategic assets. It says India must “run a marathon and sprint simultaneously” to sustain growth while absorbing shocks. It defines strategic indispensability as a position in global value chains that partners ” cannot easily substitute”, reducing the impact of coercive trade and financial measures.
Strategic Indispensability
The Survey frames the global setting as less rule-based and more driven by strategic competition, with countries using trade, technology controls and other tools to pursue security goals.
It says India must respond by strengthening domestic capabilities, improving competitiveness, and shaping standards in areas such as digital public infrastructure, so that integration acts as “influence and insurance” rather than vulnerability.
It says strategic indispensability emerges when an economy supplies goods, services or roles that matter enough to global value chains that partners cannot easily replace them.
The Survey says the near-term outlook rests on domestic demand, contained inflation and healthier balance sheets, but that the external environment requires buffers, redundancy and liquidity. It calls the stance for 2026 “strategic sobriety rather than defensive pessimism.”
Growth Outlook
The Survey says FY26 growth came mainly from household spending and investment. It estimates private final consumption expenditure at 61.5% of GDP in the ongoing fiscal, the highest level since 2011-12.
It reports consumption growth of 7.5% in the first half of the current fiscal, and says investment stayed firm, with gross fixed capital formation rising 7.6% in the first half.
The Survey says services remain the largest contributor on the supply side, with services growth estimated at 9.1% in FY26. It also reports a pick-up in manufacturing, with manufacturing growth estimated at 7.0% in FY26 and 8.4% in the first half.
It says an in-house nowcasting model, based on monthly indicators through December 2025, puts Q3 FY26 growth at 7%.
The Survey raises its assessment of India’s medium-term potential growth to 7%, up from the 6.5% it assessed three years earlier, citing reforms, sustained public investment and improving productivity conditions.
Inflation And Rates
The Survey says inflation eased sharply in FY26, supporting household purchasing power. It reports headline consumer inflation at 1.7% in April to December, driven by a fall in food prices.
It says core inflation showed persistence mainly because of higher prices for precious metals, and that measures excluding gold and silver point to softer underlying pressures.
The Survey says the central bank cut the policy repo rate by 125 basis points since February 2025, and injected durable liquidity through a cash reserve ratio cut of about Rs 2.5 lakh crore, open market operations of ₹6.95 lakh crore, and a foreign exchange swap of about $25 billion.
It says banks passed the easing through to borrowers, with the weighted average lending rate on fresh rupee loans down 59 basis points and the rate on outstanding rupee loans down 69 basis points between February and November 2025.
The Survey says bank balance sheets remain sound, with gross non-performing assets at 2.2% and a half-yearly slippage ratio at 0.7%.
This is a developing story and will be updated shortly.
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