RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra termed India's economy a "rare Goldilocks period" due to 8% GDP growth in H1 FY26 alongside benign 2.2% inflation, enabling a 25 bps repo rate cut to 5.25%. This ideal balance stems from GST rationalization, festive spending, and resilient demand amid global headwinds.
RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra highlighted India's macroeconomic sweet spot during the December policy announcement, cutting the repo rate by 25 basis points to 5.25% while shifting to a neutral stance. Q2 GDP surged 8.2%, outpacing forecasts, driven by robust festive consumption and GST rate cuts, while CPI inflation hit a record low of 0.3% in October—well below the 2-6% target.
This "Goldilocks" phase—high growth with low inflation—allows policy support for momentum without overheating risks. RBI raised FY26 GDP forecast to 7.3% from 6.8%, with inflation projected at 2%. Liquidity measures, including Rs 1 lakh crore bond buys and a $5 billion swap, inject Rs 1.45 lakh crore to aid credit and investments.
Underlying drivers include softer crude prices, government capex front-loading, and strong services/manufacturing. Despite global challenges, domestic resilience positions India for sustained expansion toward Viksit Bharat goals.
Key Highlights
GDP: 8.2% Q2 growth; FY26 forecast up to 7.3% on festive boost, GST relief
Inflation: 2.2% H1 average; October at 0.3%, core pressures minimal
Policy: Repo to 5.25%; neutral stance signals prolonged low rates
Liquidity: Rs 1.45L cr via bond repurchases, dollar-rupee swap
Resilience: Rural demand up on monsoon; external sector stable at $686B reserves
Sources: Financial Express, NDTV Profit, Moneycontrol