India's economy is set to grow 7.4% in FY26, reaffirming its position as the world's fastest‑growing major economy, even as the global economy grapples with heightened uncertainty, geopolitical fragmentation and financial market volatility, the Economic Survey 2025–26 said. The Survey, tabled in Parliament on Thursday, paints a picture of strong domestic momentum, resilient macroeconomic fundamentals, and a cautiously optimistic outlook for FY27. It also marks what the Economic Survey calls "India's strongest macroeconomic performance in decades."
The Survey revises India's medium‑term potential growth upward to 7%, citing rising productivity, stronger corporate and financial sector balance sheets and gains from digital and physical infrastructure expansion. For FY27, GDP growth is projected at 6.8–7.2%, though the Survey cautions that global turbulence will remain a persistent risk.
Fragile Global Environment
The Survey underscores that while global financial markets remain fragile and major economies grapple with inflation-growth trade-offs, India has managed to expand at a healthy pace. This year's growth acceleration comes despite punitive US tariffs imposed in 2025, which had triggered widespread fears of an export slowdown.
Instead, the Survey notes that a suite of structural reforms, like GST rationalisation, advances in deregulation and the implementation of labour codes, helped businesses absorb the shock and maintain momentum.
A central message threaded through the document is that "the global system no longer rewards macroeconomic success with currency stability or capital inflows." The document outlined three possible global scenarios for 2026, assigning the highest probability to a world marked by 'managed disorder', where episodic shocks and financial stress persist without triggering a full-blown crisis.
India's Strong Macros Win The Game
India's record‑strong macro fundamentals, including low inflation, healthy credit growth bank balance sheets, and a fiscal deficit on a proper consolidation path — have collided with a world where geopolitical tensions and capital‑flow unpredictability overpower economic logic.
Private consumption remains the single largest contributor to growth, supported by rising urabn demand, improved rural prospects and a gradual recovery in real incomes. Private consumption has climbed to its highest share of GDP in more than a decade, and investment, too, remains resilient.
As per the Survey, gross fixed capital formation is estimated at 30% of GDP, aided by record public capex and a revival in private sector investment intentions. High‑frequency indicators through Q3FY26, from UPI transactions and auto sales to e‑way bills and services PMI, point to continued momentum in both consumption and investment.
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