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India Following a strong outcome in FY 2022-23, real GDP growth is projected to slow to 6.3% in FY 2023-24 and 6.1% in FY 2024-25 on account of adverse weather-related events and the weakening international outlook. Surging services exports and public investment will continue to drive the economy. Inflation will decline progressively, with corresponding improvements of purchasing power. This, along with the end of the El Niño weather pattern, productivity gains from recent policy reforms, and improved global conditions, will help economic activity to strengthen, with projected real GDP growth of 6.5% in FY 2025-26. Monetary policy easing is assumed to start in the second half of 2024, supporting business investment and discretionary household spending. Government investment will remain at high levels. Nevertheless, further fiscal consolidation is expected, which will increase financial space for the private sector. The challenges that remain to eradicate poverty, mitigate climate change, and accelerate income convergence require substantial fiscal efforts to mobilise additional resources and strengthen regulations, institutions, and standards to steer consumers towards inclusive and sustainable practices. Domestic demand is sustaining economic activity FY 2023-24 started with strong growth driven by public investment and private consumption. However, the global economic slowdown has hit merchandise trade. There are differences along sectoral and territorial lines: services (finance and export-oriented segments in particular) are more buoyant than manufacturing and urban areas are performing better than rural ones. Recent economic statistics are sending mixed signals. According to the income-based national accounts, real GDP grew by 7.8% year-on-year in the April-June quarter, whereas it grew considerably less in the expenditure-based account. Similarly, recent market data for consumption suggest that car sales and air traffic are doing well, but commercial vehicles and tractor sales, as well as passenger rail and cargo aviation traffic are either retrenching or growing slowly. The RBI and PMI industrial surveys indicate that firms see business prospects improving, but other forward-looking surveys are less upbeat concerning demand conditions. Tighter financial market conditions and some softening in commodity prices, which reduces the overall demand for working capital loans, are moderating banking credit growth.
India 1
1. Real GDP per capita is based on GDP in constant prices (2015 PPP), USD. Quarterly population data are calculated by interpolating annual data. OECD estimates on population data for 2023. 2. OECD seasonal adjustment based on monthly consumer price index and core CPI (index 2012 = 100) from the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI). Source: OECD Economic Outlook 114 database; OECD Population database; and CEIC. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/4bdoyi OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2023 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2023