India's GDP Grows 7.7% in 2025-26, But Farm Sector Slowdown Raises Alarm
Provisional estimates released on 6 June 2026 put India's GDP growth at 7.7% for 2025-26, slightly above the forecast, with strong manufacturing and consumption but a worrying slowdown in agriculture and a projected dip to 6.6% in 2026-27.
India's economy expanded by 7.7% in the financial year 2025-26, going by the provisional estimates released on 6 June 2026. This figure was slightly above the 7.6% growth the government had forecast in February 2026. GDP, or Gross Domestic Product, is the total money value of all goods and services produced within a country in a year, and it is the main measure of how fast an economy is growing. The strong number shows that even after tensions began in the West Asia region in March 2026, the economy held up well for the full year. However, this strength is expected to weaken in the coming months as supply problems linked to the conflict spread.
Several parts of the economy performed strongly. Manufacturing (the making of goods in factories) and many services sectors grew at double-digit rates, which is impressive because they were already at a high level. Two important demand-side measures also improved. Private Final Consumption Expenditure, which tracks how much households spend, grew faster than in the previous year after staying weak at 5.8% for two years. Gross Fixed Capital Formation, which measures investment by the government and private companies in things like factories and roads, also rose more quickly. Even if much of this investment came from government spending, it tends to lift the wider economy through linked demand.
The biggest worry is agriculture. Farm sector growth slowed to 3% in 2025-26 from 4.2% in 2024-25, even though the 2025 monsoon ended at 108% of its long period average (LPA) — the LPA being the average rainfall over many years used as a benchmark. This is troubling because the weather department has forecast the 2026 monsoon at only 90% of the LPA, and fertilizer supply shortages are expected to bite in the months ahead. Since farming still employs the largest share of India's workforce, weakness here directly affects rural incomes and food output.
The data also confirm a long-term shift in the economy's structure. The share of services in total Gross Value Added (GVA) rose to 54.3% in 2025-26 from 51.9% in 2022-23. GVA measures the value of goods and services produced after removing the cost of inputs, and it is closely linked to GDP. Meanwhile, the share of agriculture in GVA fell below 20% from 22.1%, and manufacturing's share stayed almost flat — a sign that India is not building its value-added factory sector fast enough. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the government, and independent economists all expect growth to slow sharply in 2026-27, with the RBI projecting a dip to 6.6%, an estimate the Chief Economic Adviser said he saw no reason to challenge.
For exam preparation, candidates should remember the headline 7.7% GDP growth for 2025-26 and the projected 6.6% for 2026-27, and clearly distinguish GDP from GVA and grasp the sector shares (services 54.3%, agriculture below 20%). Concepts like Private Final Consumption Expenditure, Gross Fixed Capital Formation, long period average rainfall, and the RBI's role in growth forecasting are frequently tested in the economy sections of UPSC, banking, SSC, and state PCS exams.
Key Points to Remember
- India's GDP grew 7.7% in 2025-26 (provisional), above the February 2026 forecast of 7.6%
- Agriculture growth slowed to 3% from 4.2%, despite the 2025 monsoon at 108% of LPA; the 2026 monsoon is forecast at only 90% of LPA
- Services share in GVA rose to 54.3% (from 51.9% in 2022-23); agriculture's share fell below 20%; manufacturing's share stayed flat
- Private Final Consumption Expenditure (household spending) and Gross Fixed Capital Formation (investment) both grew faster than the previous year
- RBI projects 2026-27 growth to slow to 6.6%, a view supported by the Chief Economic Adviser
- GDP measures total output; GVA measures output minus input costs
Exam Relevance
Directly relevant to the economy and national accounts sections of UPSC, banking, SSC, and state PCS exams, covering GDP, GVA, sector shares, consumption and investment metrics, and RBI growth projections.
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