...
...
Next Story

What allowed India to deliver unexpected GDP growth in Q1 FY26

India has surprised economists with its GDP growth rate of 7.8% in Q1 FY26. But this is as good as it can get, as the impact of US tariffs looms.

Updated on: Aug 29, 2025 08:20 PM IST
By
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

India has grown at the fastest pace in at least a year, surprising the likes of economists and GDP pundits alike, but that growth isn’t without merit. In fact, it’s short-lived.

A car plant in Chennai. India remains the fastest growing major economy in the world, as China’s GDP growth rate came in at 5.2% and United States’ at 3.3% in April-June. (Mint Archives)
A car plant in Chennai. India remains the fastest growing major economy in the world, as China’s GDP growth rate came in at 5.2% and United States’ at 3.3% in April-June. (Mint Archives)

The super healthy GDP growth rate in the first quarter has gotten a temporary boost from front-loaded government spending—unlike last year due to 2024 Lok Sabha elections—along with front-loaded exports to the US before the 50% tariffs came in effect, Madhavi Arora, lead economist at Emkay Global, said in a note on Friday.

India’s economy unexpectedly expanded 7.8% year-on-year in the April-June quarter, picking up from 7.4% in the previous three months, according to government data released on Friday. With that, India remains the fastest growing major economy in the world, as China’s GDP growth rate came in at 5.2% and United States’ at 3.3% in the three months to 30 June.

Against that backdrop, here’s a look at the five key drivers behind the surge.

1. Government Capex

According to an ICRA report on 19 August, government spending is likely to have played a key role in supporting growth. In April-June, the Centre’s gross capital expenditure surged 52% year-on-year to 2.8 lakh crore, compared with 33.4% growth in Q4 FY25 and 35% contraction in Q1 FY24, according to data from the Controller General of Accounts.

It’s worth mentioning here that the government stopped spending in April-June 2024 due to the model code of conduct in place for the 18th Lok Sabha elections during that time.

Similarly, new project announcements nearly doubled to 5.8 lakh crore in Q1 FY26 and project completions surged to 2.3 lakh crore from 70,000 crore in the year-ago period.

This front-loading of public investments not only boosted the headline GDP figure but also filtered into gross value added growth—seen as a more accurate measure of underlying economic activity. The GVA grew 7.6% in Q1 FY26 versus 6.8% in Q1 FY25. It excludes indirect taxes and government subsidy payouts, which tend to be volatile.

2. Frontloading Exports

India’s export activity received a timely boost, particularly with goods shipped in advance of the steep US tariffs that took effect on 27 August. According to Sakshi Gupta, principal economist at HDFC Bank Ltd., exports of goods and services surged by 5.9% in April due to “frontloaded demand from economies like the US”.

3. Buoyant Service Sector

The services sector—public administration as well as financial services—held up strongly, with services GVA projected to be among the highest in recent quarters—up to 8.3%, according to ICRA estimates.

According to data from the National Statistics Office on Friday, GVA of the financial services sector rose 9.5% in Q1 FY 26 as against 7.8% in Q4 FY25. The public administration segment grew 9.7% versus 8.7% in the previous quarter.

This surge is services helped offset the softness in industry and agriculture—while agriculture grew 3.7% in Q1 FY26 versus 5.4% in Q4 FY25, mining fell -3.1% (vs 2.5% in Q4 FY25), construction rose 7.6% (vs 10.8% in Q4 FY25), manufacturing expanded 7.7% (vs 4.8% in Q4 FY25), and electricity and public utilities increased 0.5% (vs 5.4% in Q4 FY25).

4. Strong Rural Demand

A favourable monsoon supported agriculture (up 3.7% in Q1 FY26 versus 5.4% in Q4 FY25) and, therefore, rural income and consumption. Combined with rural demand, agriculture along with construction and services picked up meaningfully.

5. Low Inflation

India’s retail inflation is at an eight-year-low. That amplifies the positive impact on real GDP growth of the country due to pricing power.

The Growth Is Fleeting

To be sure, these effects are, at best, transient.

Many economists expect a slowdown in growth in the upcoming quarters as government spending wanes and external pressures take over. The upcoming GST reforms may cushion the blow, but only so much.

The 50% US tariffs are set to play a spoilsport in the July-September quarter, and thereafter, according to economists, with GDP growth likely to be hit by up to 1 percentage point. Urban consumption remains subdued, and private capex is showing signs of weakness despite higher public spending. A low inflation rate—though beneficial—also implies modest nominal GDP growth of around 8%.

“A bigger watch factor is the sub-9% nominal GDP growth, which has a second derivative impact on tax collections and corporate profit performance,” Radhika Rao, senior economist at Singapore’s DBS Bank, told Reuters. “Markets will switch focus to the catalysts for the rest of the year, which faces an interplay of tariff-related impact, passage of front-loading of exports, boost from GST rationalisation and government spending trend with an eye on revenues.”

Moreover, the likelihood of a repo rate cut by the Reserve Bank of India is now slim, what with an eight-year-low inflation print and five-quarter high growth data. “The higher-than-expected GDP growth print has doused any expectations that tariff-related turmoil could prompt monetary easing in the October 2025 policy review,” ICRA’s Chief Economist Aditi Nayar said.

Others believe this is as good as it can get.

“The first-quarter numbers have surprised us all,” Sachidanand Shukla, group chief economist at Larsen & Toubro Ltd., told Reuters. “However, the biggest takeaway is that one should not be carried away by the numbers. This is the ceiling when it comes to growth numbers and it will trend down through the rest of the year.”

Earlier this month, RBI had projected India’s real GDP growth rate at 6.5% for FY26, with Q1 at 6.5%, Q2 at 6.7%, Q3 at 6.6%, and Q4 at 6.3%. These numbers are likely to hold steady.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tushar Deep Singh

Tushar Deep Singh is a business journalist and digital editorial leader with 12 years of experience in financial journalism. Currently Assistant Editor at Hindustan Times, he is building the HT Business vertical and managing the newsletters for both Livemint and HT. When not in the newsroom, he can be found on a motorcycle. Throughout his career, Tushar has been instrumental in scaling digital publishing operations at some of India’s largest financial news websites. His six-year tenure at Mint—the first job—saw him plunge into online media to deliver record-breaking digital engagement for Livemint.com, including 7.2 million page views on 2017 UP Election Results day. He held fort at Livemint during a senior-level leadership transition later that year. That won him the HT Media Star Award (Bronze) in 2017 and a Certificate of Appreciation for Editorial Excellence in 2018. As the head of the digital desk at ETtech, he curated two daily, full-stack newsletters from an editorial as well as product perspective. At NDTV Profit, he transitioned from website editor to principal correspondent, reporting on the auto sector for the TV channel and website, thereby adding yet another layer to his editorial expertise. He is a post-graduate in journalism from Xavier Institute of Communications, Mumbai, and a graduate from St. Xavier's College, Ahmedabad.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe