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IMF’s WEO ups India’s 2025-26 growth forecast

Among major economies, the US is expected to grow at 2%, China at 4.8% and the Euro Area at 1.2% in 2025.

Published on: Oct 15, 2025 06:38 AM IST
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India will continue to be the fastest growing major economy in the world and do better than it was expected to in July, the IMF said in its World Economic Outlook (WEO) released on Tuesday. India’s projected GDP growth for 2025-26 is 6.6%, 20 basis points more than what it was in WEO’s July projections. One basis point is one hundredth of a percentage point. To be sure, the 2026-27 GDP growth forecast for India has been brought down by 20 basis points compared to the July projection to 6.2%. The IMF’s latest growth projection for India is slightly lower than the 6.8% forecast by the RBI in its MPC resolution released earlier this month.

At the IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington on Tuesday. (AFP)
At the IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington on Tuesday. (AFP)

“Carryover from a strong first quarter more than offsetting the increase in the US effective tariff rate on imports from India since July”, the WEO report said, while also noting that inflation has surprised on the downside in India. To be sure, the WEO report also shows that the effective tariff rate facing Indian exports to the US stood at 35.8% in October 2025, the second highest among major countries and country groups after China. This is a result of US President Donald Trump imposing an additional 25% tariff on India on account of its Russian oil imports even though he has not imposed any such tariff on China which buys more Russian oil than India.

Among major economies, the US is expected to grow at 2%, China at 4.8% and the Euro Area at 1.2% in 2025. Growth rate for Emerging Market and Developing Economies is expected to be 4.2%. All of them, except China, have seen an upgrade in growth prospects compared to the July projections. In China, the growth projection is unchanged between the July and October projections.

The most important task to boost growth prospects going forward according to IMF is to resolve policy uncertainty and “clearer and more stable bilateral and multilateral trade agreements” which alone can boost global output by 0.4% in the very near term. “A return to low tariffs that prevailed before January 2025 based on these agreements adds even more upside, about 0.3 percent”, IMF said. While it has flagged the AI boom as something comparable to the dotcom bubble signifying exuberance, it has also recognised its long-term productivity enhancing capacity.

“The task ahead is to restore confidence through credible, predictable, and sustainable policy actions. Policymakers should establish clear, transparent, and rules-based trade policy road maps to reduce uncertainty and support investment and to reap the productivity and growth benefits that more trade brings”, the WEO report said.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Roshan Kishore

Roshan Kishore is the Data and Political Economy Editor at Hindustan Times. His weekly column for HT Premium Terms of Trade appears every Friday.

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