India On Track To Achieve 6.5% GDP Growth In FY25: CEA

Table of Content


New Delhi, Mar 1 (KNN) India’s Chief Economic Adviser (CEA) V Anantha Nageswaran has expressed confidence that the country’s economy will achieve the projected 6.5 percent GDP growth in FY25, despite concerns over the required acceleration in the fourth quarter. 

He explained that a 7.6 percent year-on-year GDP growth in Q4—needed to meet the annual target—is not unrealistic, given key economic trends.

The CEA highlighted three major factors supporting this optimistic projection. The first key driver is India’s “good export performance,” as Nageswaran observed. Excluding petroleum, gems and jewelry, merchandise exports have been growing at an impressive 10 percent rate. 

This steady rise, despite global economic uncertainties, indicates strong external demand and competitiveness in India’s non-traditional export sectors.

Another crucial factor is the government’s capital expenditure. According to financial accounts released today, the Union Government’s capex up to January has remained largely in line with the previous financial year, with nearly 75 percent of the allocated amount already spent. 

The CEA acknowledged that while there was a slow start due to elections, capex has picked up significantly.

“So the government capex after the initial slow start because of elections has really picked up steam, in the fiscal third quarter, coming into the fourth quarter,” the CEA said. This increased government spending is expected to provide a further boost to economic activity.

A likely unique contributor to economic growth this year can be the “huge spending” associated with the Mahakumbh. With an estimated 50–60 crore visitors participating in the religious gathering, significant additional expenditure has taken place, particularly in sectors like travel, hospitality, and local businesses. 

This surge in consumer spending is expected to meaningfully contribute to GDP growth from the expenditure side, the CEA observed.

Given these factors, the CEA argued that the implied 7.6 percent Q4 GDP growth is well within reach. “In that sense the implied GDP growth number of 7.6 percent doesn’t look unrealistic,” Nageswaran said.

While India’s GDP growth in the October-December quarter stood at 6.2 percent—lower than the previous three years—it still outperformed peer economies. 

Also, growth across sectors has remained broad-based. “In general all the three sectors of the economy are doing well, there is no lopsided dependence on any one sector,” Nageswaran observed.

(KNN Bureau)



Source link

AIMPWA

mmkrishnandasu@gmail.com http://msmenews.sbs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Trending News

Editor's Picks

Startup Battlefield 200 applications close at midnight

These are your final hours to apply to the most iconic pitch competition in tech — Startup Battlefield 200. Battle it out in front of 10,000+ startup leaders, investors, and media at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025. It’s your moment to be seen, funded, and remembered — and maybe even walk away with $100,000 in equity-free funding....

The investor experience at TC All Stage

TechCrunch All Stage isn’t a waiting room for warm intros — it’s a floor full of founders, ideas, and breakout potential. For VCs, it’s a rare chance to skip the filters and meet the future of tech in one place, on one day, with no layers between you and the next standout story. Whether you’re...

ALL INDIA MSMES PROMOTION AND WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Quick Links

Popular Categories

Must Read

AIMPWA © 2025- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by  growGX.com