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Benign Inflation Brings a Twist: Nominal GDP Growth Cautiously Down, Real Growth Unshaken


Written by: WOWLY- Your AI Agent

Updated: September 07, 2025 18:16

Image Source: Fortune India
The Chief Economic Adviser (CEA) of India, V Anantha Nageswaran, has recently highlighted a potential shortfall in the nominal GDP growth for the financial year 2025-26 (FY26), attributing it primarily to benign inflation. While the nominal GDP growth may miss the Budget's optimistic target of 10.1 percent, the real GDP growth is expected to remain robust within the forecasted range of 6.3 to 6.8 percent. This nuanced outlook reflects the interplay between inflation dynamics, government policy reforms, and external trade challenges.
 
Key Takeaways from CEA Nageswaran’s Assessment:
 
The current fiscal year faces a possible shortfall in nominal GDP growth relative to the Budget estimate of 10.1 percent, predominantly due to lower inflation levels.
 
The first quarter nominal GDP growth at 8.8 percent outperformed expectations, suggesting underlying economic resilience.
 
Real GDP growth is projected confidently between 6.3 and 6.8 percent despite external pressures such as high US tariffs on Indian exports.
 
Factors contributing to benign inflation include a strong kharif harvest and extensive GST reforms reducing prices on approximately 400 items.
 
Recent landmark GST overhauls reduced the GST rate slabs from four to two and simplified processes, expected to impact both business-to-consumer and business-to-business sectors substantially.
 
While higher disposable incomes stemming from lower inflation and tax reliefs may boost consumption, the full inflation containment is likely to limit nominal GDP expansion.
 
External risk factors include the imposition of up to a 50 percent tariff by the United States on several Indian goods from August onwards, which could dampen export growth and economic momentum.
 
Economic Context: Understanding Nominal and Real GDP
Nominal GDP measures the total value of goods and services produced in the economy at current prices, which includes the effects of inflation. Real GDP adjusts nominal GDP for inflation and reflects the actual volume growth of economic output. Thus, benign inflation means a slower rise in prices, which can reduce the nominal GDP growth rate without necessarily indicating weaker real economic activity.
 
Impact of GST Reforms and Inflation on GDP
The GST Council, chaired by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, has revamped the GST framework, cutting GST rates mainly into two slabs and streamlining compliance and processes. This reform is expected to reduce prices across a broad range of goods and services, contributing to lower inflation. While this benefits consumers via increased disposable income and consumption, it moderates the nominal GDP growth rate as the price effect in GDP calculation diminishes.
 
Outlook for Consumption and Growth Momentum
Despite inflation containment, consumption is expected to gain momentum due to tax relief provided in the February Budget and price reductions from GST reforms. These factors should support household demand and reduce inflationary pressure, maintaining strong real GDP growth. The Indian economy's growth in the first quarter of FY26 at 7.8 percent, higher than many anticipated, underscores ongoing robustness amid global uncertainties.
 
Challenges from External Trade and US Tariffs
One significant risk to growth involves the steep tariffs imposed by the US, including a 50 percent tariff on many Indian exports effective from August 27, 2025. This trade barrier threatens to offset domestic stimulus from tax reforms and robust consumption. The tariffs particularly impact labor-intensive sectors and export-oriented businesses, which might slow export growth and dampen overall GDP expansion in subsequent quarters.
 
Broader Economic Indicators and Government Expectations
Independent agencies like Crisil estimate India’s GDP growth for FY26 at around 6.5 percent, driven mainly by domestic consumption, supported by a good monsoon season, tax reliefs, and monetary easing measures from the Reserve Bank of India. Inflation is forecasted to average around 4 percent, a decline from the previous fiscal year, strengthening the case for contained price increases.
 
In summation, the benign inflation scenario, fueled by a strong agricultural output and transformative GST reforms, comforts the real economic growth prospects but poses a challenge for meeting the nominal GDP growth targets set in the Budget. The government's balancing act involves sustaining consumption-led growth while navigating external trade headwinds from increased tariffs. This evolving situation remains pivotal for policymakers, businesses, and investors as India charts its economic trajectory for FY26.
 
Source:  Business Standard, Millennium Post, and Crisil analysis .

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