20-05-2026 12:00:00 AM
PTI New Delhi
India's gross domestic product (GDP) is likely to grow at 6.2% in fiscal 2027, down from the earlier estimate of 6.5% amid elevated crude oil prices triggered by the West Asia crisis, according to rating agency ICRA. For fiscal 2026, ICRA estimates GDP growth at 7.5%, marginally lower than the National Statistical Office's (NSO) Second Advance Estimate (SAE) of 7.6% for the fiscal year.
"ICRA now assumes crude oil prices to average at $95/bbl in FY27, against our prior estimate of $85/bbl, given the ongoing stickiness in prices amid the stalemate in West Asia. Consequently, we have pared our baseline forecast for the FY27 GDP growth (at constant 2022-23 prices) to 6.2% from the 6.5% expected earlier," ICRA Chief Economist Aditi Nayar said.
The rating agency also said GDP growth in the fourth quarter is expected to ease to a three-quarter low of 7% from 7.8% in the third quarter of 2025-26.
"However, a slower rise in manufacturing volumes, contraction in exports, and nascent signs of margin pressure amid the West Asia fallout may have weighed on the industrial gross value added (GVA) growth performance in the quarter. Consequently, we expect the GDP growth to have slowed to a three-quarter low of 7% in Q4 2025-26, below the NSO's implicit estimate of 7.3% for the quarter, while remaining quite robust," Nayar said.