Blitz India Business
The International Monetary Fund’s FY26 growth estimate for India stands at about 7.3%, citing strong momentum, even as high-frequency activity gauges ease from recent peaks — a mix that points to fast but more sustainable expansion rather than an overheating one.
The June purchasing managers’ surveys stayed firmly in expansion but softened: the manufacturing PMI eased to about 54.2 from 55.0 in May, and services to 57.3 from a six-month high of 58.9. Any reading above 50 signals growth; the moderation reflects softer export orders and cost pressures rather than a downturn.
A cooler PMI alongside a firm growth call is not a contradiction — it is momentum settling into a pace the economy can sustain.
By the Numbers
- IMF FY26 growth: ~7.3%
- IMF calendar-year: 6.3% (2026), 6.5% (2027)
- Mfg PMI (Jun): ~54.2 (from 55.0)
- Services PMI (Jun): 57.3 (from 58.9)
The composition is reassuring: domestic demand and services remain the engine, while the export-order softness mirrors a cautious global backdrop rather than a home-grown weakness. With FY27 consumer inflation projected near 4%, the policy setting has room to stay supportive of growth.
The constructive priority is to convert momentum into capacity — sustained public and private capex, faster clearances and skilling — so that a strong cyclical year hardens into a higher structural growth path.


