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India Posts Surprise Current Account Surplus After Four Quarters: What’s Driving The Turnaround


Updated: June 28, 2025 14:40

Image Source : Reuters

India’s external sector just delivered a pleasant surprise. After three consecutive quarters of deficits, the country recorded a current account surplus of 13.5 billion dollars in the January–March quarter of FY25. This marks the highest surplus in over a year and signals a shift in the underlying dynamics of trade, services, and remittances. The Reserve Bank of India attributes this turnaround to robust services exports, record-high remittances, and a moderation in primary income outflows.

Here’s a comprehensive breakdown of what this means for the economy and what to watch going forward.

Key Numbers That Define The Quarter

- India’s current account surplus stood at 13.5 billion dollars, or 1.3 percent of GDP, in Q4 FY25  
- This compares to a deficit of 11.3 billion dollars (1.1 percent of GDP) in the previous quarter  
- Net services receipts rose to 53.3 billion dollars, up from 42.7 billion dollars a year ago  
- Personal transfer receipts, mainly remittances, hit a record 33.9 billion dollars  
- The merchandise trade deficit widened to 59.5 billion dollars but was lower than the previous quarter’s 79.3 billion dollars  
- For the full fiscal year, the current account deficit narrowed to 23.3 billion dollars (0.6 percent of GDP), down from 26 billion dollars (0.7 percent) in FY24

What’s Behind The Surplus

The surplus was driven by a combination of strong invisible inflows and a dip in outflows:

- Services exports surged, particularly in business and computer services  
- Remittances from Indians abroad reached an all-time high, reflecting both seasonal inflows and structural resilience  
- Primary income outflows, which include investment income payments, moderated to 11.9 billion dollars from 14.8 billion dollars a year ago  
- The financial account saw mixed trends: FDI inflows slowed to 0.4 billion dollars in Q4, while foreign portfolio investments recorded a net outflow of 5.9 billion dollars

Trade Still A Drag, But Less So

Despite the surplus, India’s merchandise trade deficit remains a concern:

- The Q4 trade gap of 59.5 billion dollars was higher than the same period last year but showed improvement from the previous quarter  
- Lower oil prices and strong services exports helped cushion the impact  
- The narrowing of the trade deficit from Q3’s 79.3 billion dollars suggests some easing of external pressures

Implications For The Rupee And Policy

The surplus has several macroeconomic implications:

- It provides a buffer for the rupee, which has faced intermittent pressure from global uncertainties  
- The RBI’s forex reserves saw an accretion of 8.8 billion dollars in Q4, though FY25 overall saw a depletion of 5 billion dollars  
- With inflation risks still looming, the surplus gives policymakers some breathing room on the external front

Looking Ahead: Will The Surplus Sustain?

While the Q4 surplus is encouraging, analysts caution against assuming a trend reversal:

- The surplus is partly seasonal and may not persist into the next quarter  
- Global trade tensions, oil price volatility, and capital flow dynamics will continue to influence the current account  
- ICRA expects the current account to revert to a deficit in the ongoing quarter, though the full-year gap may remain modest

Sources: The Hindu, Indian Express, Business Standard, Telegraph India, MSN India

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