What Happened
- India's manufacturing sector expanded at its fastest pace in four months in February 2026, according to the S&P Global/HSBC India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI).
- The PMI rose to 56.9 in February from 55.4 in January, reaching a four-month high and comfortably above the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
- The expansion was powered primarily by strong domestic demand, with robust new orders and the fastest output growth in four months, as consumer and business spending remained resilient.
- However, export order growth slowed to its weakest in 17 months, reflecting headwinds from global trade uncertainty — including disruptions from the Gulf conflict and softening external demand.
- Input cost inflation remained moderate, but output price growth accelerated, suggesting manufacturers are rebuilding margins after a period of competitive pricing.
Static Topic Bridges
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) — Methodology and Significance
The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) is a composite, survey-based leading indicator of economic activity in the manufacturing and services sectors. It is produced by S&P Global (formerly IHS Markit) using monthly surveys of purchasing managers at hundreds of private-sector companies.
Respondents assess whether key business conditions — output, new orders, employment, supplier delivery times, and input stocks — improved, remained the same, or deteriorated compared to the previous month. These qualitative responses are converted into a diffusion index (PMI) using weighted averages of five sub-components: New Orders (30%), Output (25%), Employment (20%), Supplier Delivery Times (15%), and Stocks of Purchases (10%).
- PMI > 50: expansion in the sector; PMI < 50: contraction; PMI = 50: no change
- Components: New Orders (30%), Output (25%), Employment (20%), Supplier Delivery Times (15%, inverted), Stocks of Purchases (10%)
- Published by S&P Global; HSBC is the headline sponsor for India's PMI survey
- India has two main PMIs: Manufacturing PMI (survey of 400+ manufacturing firms) and Services PMI; these combine into the Composite PMI
- PMI is a leading indicator — it reflects current business conditions and provides advance signal of GDP growth trends
- Unlike GDP data (released quarterly with a lag of 60 days), PMI is released within the first week of the following month — making it more timely for economic tracking
- Flash PMI (preliminary estimate): released ~10 days before month-end; Final PMI: released on the 1st business day of the following month
Connection to this news: February's PMI of 56.9 is a strong reading by historical standards, consistent with India's near-7% real GDP growth trajectory. It provides one of the earliest data points confirming that manufacturing activity held up well despite global headwinds in the month.
India's Manufacturing Sector: Structure, Policy, and the Make in India Drive
India's manufacturing sector contributes approximately 17% of GDP (at current prices) — significantly below the 25–30% share seen in East Asian manufacturing powerhouses like China (27%) and South Korea (28%). Expanding this share is a core policy objective, both to absorb India's large working-age population and to reduce dependence on services-sector growth (which tends to be more skill-intensive and capital-intensive).
The Make in India initiative (launched 2014) and its successor programs — Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes across 14 sectors — aim to raise the manufacturing share of GDP to 25% by 2025, attract global supply chain shifts from China, and create 100 million manufacturing jobs by 2022 (a target that has been pushed out). The PLI schemes together offer ₹1.97 lakh crore in production-linked incentives, with approved beneficiaries across mobile phones, electronics, pharmaceuticals, specialty chemicals, textiles, food processing, and more.
- Manufacturing's share of India's GDP: ~17% (target: 25% by 2025 under Make in India)
- PLI schemes: 14 sectors; total budgetary outlay: ~₹1.97 lakh crore over 5 years
- India's manufacturing competitiveness: competitive labour costs, large domestic market, improving logistics (PM Gati Shakti), but challenged by land acquisition delays, regulatory complexity, power costs
- Index of Industrial Production (IIP): the other key manufacturing indicator — measures output volume in 23 industry groups; base year 2011–12; released monthly with a 6-week lag (less timely than PMI)
- India's manufacturing employment: ~58 million formal + large informal workforce; MSME sector (6.3 crore enterprises) dominates manufacturing employment
Connection to this news: A PMI of 56.9 reflects strong momentum in India's manufacturing output and orders, validating the effectiveness of the PLI scheme and domestic demand resilience. The slowdown in export orders (17-month low), however, signals a dependence on domestic demand that could become a vulnerability if consumption falters.
Leading vs. Lagging Economic Indicators — UPSC Static Concept
Economic indicators are classified as leading (predict future economic activity), coincident (move in line with current activity), or lagging (confirm trends after they have occurred). Understanding this distinction is important for UPSC, which frequently asks about the nature and purpose of specific indicators.
The PMI is a leading indicator: it reflects forward-looking business intentions (new orders placed, hiring decisions, inventory building) that typically translate into actual output changes 1–3 months later. GDP growth data is a lagging indicator — by the time Q3 GDP is published, it reflects activity from 3–6 months ago. The combination of PMI (leading) and IIP (more coincident) provides a more complete picture of the manufacturing cycle.
- Leading indicators: PMI, business confidence indices, new investment announcements, consumer sentiment surveys — signal future economic direction
- Coincident indicators: IIP (industrial output), employment data, sales tax collections — reflect current state
- Lagging indicators: GDP growth rate (quarterly, 60-day lag), bank NPAs, unemployment rate — confirm historical trends
- PMI above 50 consistently for 6+ months = strong evidence of a sustained expansion phase
- India's Manufacturing PMI has been above 50 for 44+ consecutive months as of February 2026 — indicating sustained expansion since the post-COVID recovery
- S&P Global releases PMIs for 30+ countries — comparing India's PMI with peers (China, Indonesia, Vietnam) is a useful competitive benchmarking tool
Connection to this news: February's 56.9 print extends India's manufacturing expansion streak to 44+ months — one of the longest sustained runs in the survey's history. The domestic demand resilience (despite weak export orders) suggests that India's internal consumption market is a robust anchor for manufacturing growth.
Key Facts & Data
- India Manufacturing PMI, February 2026: 56.9 (four-month high; up from 55.4 in January)
- New export order growth: weakest in 17 months — reflecting global trade headwinds
- PMI threshold: above 50 = expansion; below 50 = contraction
- India's Manufacturing PMI has been above 50 for 44+ consecutive months (sustained expansion since post-COVID recovery)
- Manufacturing's share of India's GDP: ~17% (Make in India target: 25%)
- PLI schemes: 14 sectors; total outlay ~₹1.97 lakh crore
- S&P Global/HSBC survey: ~400+ manufacturing firms; released first business day of following month
- IIP (Index of Industrial Production): alternative manufacturing measure; 23 industry groups; base year 2011–12; released with 6-week lag (less timely than PMI)
- Employment sub-index: rose to fastest pace in four months, consistent with output expansion