Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: The International Monetary Fund’s upward revision of India’s growth forecast to 7.3 per cent for 2025-26 is a welcome endorsement of the economy’s near-term momentum. It confirms that India has outperformed expectations in a year marked by global uncertainty, trade disruptions and geopolitical flux.
Yet, as the IMF itself cautions through its medium-term projections, this is not a moment for complacency. The real challenge lies in sustaining growth once cyclical tailwinds weaken.
The first area of caution is the composition of growth. Much of the recent momentum has been driven by public capital expenditure and Government-led infrastructure spending.
While this has had positive multiplier effects, it is not a permanent engine. Fiscal space is finite, and growth cannot rest indefinitely on public finances. A durable expansion requires a revival of private investment, particularly in manufacturing and labour-intensive sectors — an outcome that remains uneven.
Second, employment remains the economy’s most vulnerable fault line. High GDP growth has not translated into commensurate creation of quality jobs, especially for semi-skilled and first-time entrants. The persistence of informal and low-productivity employment risks constraining consumption demand. Without a stronger jobs pipeline, growth risks becoming increasingly capital-intensive and socially fragile.
Third, inflation may be easing, but it is far from settled. The IMF’s optimism rests partly on subdued food prices, a variable prone to volatility. Climate shocks, supply disruptions, or commodity swings can quickly reverse the disinflationary trend. A premature easing of financial conditions or fiscal slippage could complicate the Reserve Bank of India’s balancing act.
External risks also loom larger than headline numbers suggest. The global economy is increasingly fragmented. Shifting trade policies, geopolitical tensions, and renewed protectionism — particularly in advanced economies — pose risks to India’s exports. Overreliance on services, especially IT, leaves India exposed to cyclical slowdowns and AI-driven efficiency gains that may cap job creation.
Another caution lies in uneven domestic demand. Urban consumption has held up, but rural recovery remains patchy. Agricultural incomes, small enterprise profitability and real wage growth need attention. Ignoring these segments risks widening disparities, undermining social cohesion and long-term growth potential.
Finally, structural reforms remain unfinished. Gains from infrastructure and digitisation will plateau without progress in education quality, skilling, labour mobility and regulatory certainty. India’s demographic advantage could turn into a liability if the workforce is not productively absorbed.
The IMF’s upgrade validates momentum, not trajectory. Converting a cyclical upswing into a resilient, employment-rich expansion will require policy discipline, reform persistence and a willingness to look beyond flattering growth numbers to underlying stresses.
For policymakers, the test is not growth optics but durability, inclusion and credibility, ensuring reforms survive electoral cycles and global shocks without derailing anchors credibly.
The task ahead is to convert a cyclical upswing into a structurally resilient, employment-rich expansion Such a task that will require policy discipline, reform persistence, and a willingness to look beyond flattering growth numbers to the economy’s underlying stresses


