Discover why real GDP offers a more accurate picture of economic growth by adjusting for inflation and when nominal GDP might be more useful for short-term analysis.
Understand the income approach to GDP, where total expenditures equal the income from goods and services in an economy.
India’s data reset reveals a smaller economic footprint and weakened consumption, validating long-held overestimation claims. Even though there is improved statistical robustness, some concerns remain ...
Despite a downward revision in nominal GDP following a change in the base year, India's overall fiscal dynamics remain very comfortable, with the fiscal deficit contained at 63 per cent of the revised ...
India’s GDP is estimated to grow 7.6% in FY26 with nominal growth at 8.6%, supported by strong quarterly performance and revised national accounts data, highlighting resilient economic momentum.
Chetan Ahya, Chief Asia Economist, Morgan Stanley, said India’s growth outlook remains secure. In his view, the broader ...
Chennai: The nominal GDP estimate of FY26 has come down to Rs. 345 lakh crore in the revised series compared to the Rs. 357 lakh crore in the old series. With this, the fiscal deficit will need 20 bps ...
Meeting the FY27 fiscal deficit target of 4.3% of GDP will now require nominal growth of 13-14% next year – much higher than ...
SBICAPS Research puts the FY27 pressure in starker terms. Assuming 10% nominal growth and a similar absolute fiscal deficit of ₹16.95 trillion, the deficit could overshoot its FY27 target by 25 basis ...
According to the ICICI economists, the outlook remains positive amid improving export prospects, private sector capital ...
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