ICRA Raises India’s GDP Growth Forecast to 6.5% for FY26

Forecast Upgrade:

  • ICRA revised India’s GDP growth forecast for FY26 to 6.5%, up from 6% earlier.
  • Revision driven by GST rate cuts and income tax relief, releasing nearly ₹3 lakh crore into household hands.

Impact of GST & Policy Support:

  • Consumption boost expected to cushion the impact of steep US import tariffs (up to 50% on Indian goods).
  • Exporters mitigating tariff shock by:
    • Diversifying markets (Mexico, Europe, Dubai).
    • Increasing product value.
    • Leveraging subsidiaries in tariff-free zones.

Sectoral Impact:

  • Auto sector: Diversification & higher value addition to sustain exports.
  • Metals sector: Limited disruption; exporters passing costs to US buyers due to lack of domestic substitutes.
  • NBFCs & Banks: Consumption lift to improve credit quality and demand despite earlier stress in retail/MSME loans.

Credit Growth Projections

Bank credit:

  • FY26: ₹19–20.5 lakh crore (10.4–11.3% growth).
  • FY25: ₹18 lakh crore (10.9% growth).
  • FY24: 16.3%.

NBFC credit (excl. infra):

  • FY26: 15–17%.
  • FY25: 17%.
  • FY24: 24%.
  • Liquidity & CRR cut expected to support competitive lending environment.

Risks Highlighted by ICRA:

  • MSMEs & unsecured personal loans remain vulnerable:
    • MSME loans form 17% of non-food bank credit (₹184 lakh crore as of July 2025).
    • Small business + unsecured loans form 34% of NBFC book (₹35 lakh crore as of March 2025).
  • Geopolitical risks and export weakness could trigger stress.
About ICRA
  • Indian Credit Rating Agency Limited (ICRA), established in 1991, is an independent professional investment information and credit rating agency.
  • Headquartered in Gurugram, Haryana.
  • Moody’s Corporation is its largest shareholder (~51%).
GDP Measurement in India
  • Calculated by National Statistical Office (NSO), Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).
  • India follows real GDP (constant prices) as benchmark for growth trends.
  • GDP is classified into: Agriculture, Industry, Services sectors.
US Tariffs on India
  • India exports over 140 product categories to the US.
  • Key sectors: Auto components, seafood, metals, textiles.
  • Current tariff rates on Indian goods: up to 50%, higher than on China, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Japan.
Credit & Banking Context
  • CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio): Percentage of a commercial bank’s net demand and time liabilities (NDTL) kept with RBI as cash reserves.
  • NBFC (Non-Banking Financial Company): Financial institutions providing banking-like services but not allowed to accept demand deposits.

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