India’s economy delivered an impressive performance in the July–September quarter of FY2025-26, registering 8.2 percent real GDP growth, the fastest pace in a year and a half. This sharp acceleration from the 5.6 percent expansion in the same quarter last year highlights India’s solid footing as the world’s fastest-growing major economy. The first half of the fiscal year has now averaged 8 percent growth, reinforcing a broad-based domestic revival.
Nominal GDP increased by 8.7 percent, only slightly above real growth. This narrow gap indicates subdued inflation, which has helped support real household purchasing power. However, the softer inflation reading may also constrain government revenue, as nominal income forms the base for tax collections.
Manufacturing, Services, and Construction Drive the Upswing
One of the standout features of this quarter’s performance is the resurgence in manufacturing. The sector grew by 9.1 percent, reflecting upticks in industrial output, stronger demand for goods, and healthy corporate profitability. Many industries have reported better capacity utilization and a more favourable input-cost environment, adding momentum to the sector.
Construction also showed solid expansion at 7.2 percent, supported by government-led infrastructure projects and continued capital expenditure. From road networks to public transport corridors, large-scale projects have helped maintain steady activity across the sector.
The services sector remains the backbone of the economy, clocking 9.2 percent growth. Financial, real estate, and professional services were particularly strong, recording over 10 percent expansion. This reflects increased financial activity, improving urban sentiment, and stronger corporate service demand. Agriculture, however, grew at a more modest pace of 3.5 percent, partly due to uneven monsoon patterns.
Consumption and Investment Point to Strong Domestic Demand
On the demand side, household spending picked up, with private final consumption expenditure rising 7.9 percent. Urban consumption remained particularly strong, supported by higher incomes, stable prices, and improving employment conditions.
Investment activity held firm as well. Gross fixed capital formation grew 7.3 percent, driven by public infrastructure push and a gradual pickup in private investment. Higher investment levels suggest rising confidence among businesses, especially in manufacturing and construction-linked industries.
Together, strong consumption and steady investments underline a domestic-led growth pattern, reducing dependence on external demand.
Net Exports Remain a Drag
Despite strong domestic indicators, the external sector continues to weigh on growth. Weak global demand and volatile geopolitical conditions have limited export momentum. The trade deficit, driven by softer goods exports and sticky imports, reduced the net contribution of external trade to overall GDP performance.
Economists also point out that a low GDP deflator played a role in boosting real growth. As inflation normalizes in the coming quarters, this supportive effect may taper off, and nominal GDP growth will need to pick up to ensure strong fiscal outcomes.
Government Perspective and Economic Outlook
Government officials credit structural reforms, productivity improvements, and eased business regulations for this robust performance. Analysts agree that the recovery is broad-based, but they highlight several conditions for sustaining momentum.
Key factors to watch include:
- stability in global economic conditions
- revival in goods exports
- continued public and private capital expenditure
- strengthening rural consumption
- moderate inflation trends
If these drivers remain favourable, many forecasts expect India’s full-year FY26 growth to exceed 7 percent.
A Promising Quarter, but Challenges Remain
India’s 8.2 percent GDP growth reflects a balanced and healthy expansion across manufacturing, services, consumption, and investment. While the outlook remains optimistic, sustaining this pace will depend on maintaining domestic demand, improving export competitiveness, and navigating global uncertainties.
The next few quarters will determine whether India’s strong momentum solidifies into a long-term growth trajectory.