India’s GDP Growth In Q1 FY 26 at 7.8% : A Blow To US President Donald Trump’s ‘Dead Economy’ Narrative

Now, India’s Q1 GDP for FY 26 has zoomed to 7.8%, the fastest pace in five quarters

US President Donald Trump may call India a “dead economy,” even suggesting that “India and Russia can take their dead economies down together.” But the numbers tell a very different story. Last year saw India’s highest ever GST collection: $270 billion; highest ever vehicle sales: 25 million; highest ever Manufacturing PMI: 59.8; highest ever Forex reserves: $704 billion; highest ever Sensex: 85,900. And now, India’s Q1 GDP for FY 26 has zoomed to 7.8%, the fastest pace in five quarters. Tell-tale signs of a “dead economy”? Hardly. The data, not the tirades, reflects India’s surprising economic resilience.

Defies Trump’s Jibe

The National Statistics Office (NSO) released fresh data on Friday showing India’s GDP expanded 7.8% year-on-year in April–June 2025, surpassing market expectations of 6.7% and improving from the 7.4% growth seen in the previous quarter. With this, India cemented its position as the world’s fastest-growing major economy, outpacing both China (5.2%) and the US (3.3%) during the same period.

Far from the gloom projected by Trump’s rhetoric and 50% Tariffs, the data underscores India’s underlying economic strength, led by robust services, healthy farm output, and front-loaded government spending. Economists note that while the pace may moderate later in the fiscal year, India’s resilience at a time of global slowdown is striking.

Government Spending Powers Growth

A key driver of Q1 performance was a surge in government capital expenditure. According to official data, the Centre’s gross capital expenditure jumped 52% year-on-year to ₹2.8 lakh crore in April–June 2025. The increase was especially notable when compared with a 35% contraction during the same quarter last year, due to the 2024 general elections.

New project announcements nearly doubled to ₹5.8 lakh crore, while project completions surged to ₹2.3 lakh crore from just ₹70,000 crore a year earlier. This infusion of public spending not only lifted headline GDP growth but also boosted gross value added (GVA), which rose 7.6% in Q1 compared with 6.8% a year earlier.

Frontloading Exports Before US Tariffs

Another short-term but significant boost came from frontloaded exports ahead of the steep 50% tariffs imposed by the US from August 27. Economists at HDFC Bank noted that goods and services exports rose by 5.9% in April alone, driven by “advance demand from economies like the US.”

While the full impact of Trump’s tariffs will play out in subsequent quarters, this early surge gave Indian exporters temporary relief and helped buoy GDP in the first quarter.

Services Sector Remains the Growth Engine

The services sector, India’s long-standing economic backbone, posted strong gains in Q1 FY26. Data showed services GVA grew 8.3%, driven by financial services (up 9.5%) and public administration (up 9.7%).

This robust expansion offset some weakness in industry and agriculture. While agriculture grew 3.7% compared with 5.4% in the previous quarter, industry showed mixed results: manufacturing grew 7.7% (vs 4.8% last quarter), construction slowed to 7.6% (from 10.8%), and mining contracted by -3.1%.

Rural Demand and Low Inflation Add Tailwinds

India’s favorable monsoon supported rural incomes, lifting agricultural output and boosting consumption in semi-urban and rural markets. Stronger rural demand, combined with resilient services and construction activity, gave a broad-based thrust to growth.

Additionally, low inflation acted as a powerful enabler. Retail inflation hovered near an eight-year low, magnifying the positive impact on real GDP by preserving consumer purchasing power.

A Strong Start, Challenges Ahead

While India’s Q1 growth rate has exceeded all forecasts, economists caution that the momentum may not be sustained at the same level in subsequent quarters. The boost from front-loaded government spending and exports will likely taper off, and the impact of US tariffs may weigh on external demand.

The Reserve Bank of India has projected GDP growth of 6.5% for FY26, with quarterly estimates of 6.7% in Q2, 6.6% in Q3, and 6.3% in Q4. Still, even these moderated figures would keep India ahead of its global peers.

The Resilient “Dead Economy”

Trump’s dismissal of India as a “dead economy” doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. The highest ever GST collections, record vehicle sales, unprecedented forex reserves, a surging stock market, and now a 7.8% Q1 GDP growth rate are hardly signs of an economy in decline. Instead, they point to a nation navigating global headwinds with resilience, diversification, and strategic investment.

India remains the fastest-growing major economy in the world. If this is what a “dead economy” looks like, then the global economic order may need to redefine what life looks like.

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