What Happened
- The Asian Development Bank (ADB) raised India's GDP growth forecast for FY2026-27 (FY27) to 6.9%, up from its earlier estimate of 6.5%
- Growth is further projected to rise to 7.3% in FY2027-28 (FY28), driven by domestic reforms, effects of new trade agreements including with the EU, and expected government salary revisions
- For FY2025-26 (FY26), inflation is projected to ease to 2.1%, but is forecast to rebound to 4.5% in FY27 due to higher global oil prices, currency weakness, and food price recovery
- The ADB flagged the West Asia energy crisis as a key downside risk to India's growth trajectory
- India's projected growth significantly outpaces the regional average — ADB expects developing Asia and the Pacific to grow at 5.1% in 2026, down from 5.4% the previous year
Static Topic Bridges
Asian Development Bank (ADB) — Role and Structure
The Asian Development Bank was established in 1966 and is headquartered in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines. It is owned by 69 members — 50 from the Asia-Pacific region and 19 from outside. The ADB is a multilateral development finance institution whose mandate is to reduce poverty in Asia and the Pacific through inclusive and sustainable economic growth, and regional integration.
- Provides loans, grants, technical assistance, and equity investments to member countries
- Funding instruments include Ordinary Capital Resources (OCR) for middle-income countries and the Asian Development Fund (ADF) offering concessional lending to low-income countries
- Has 42 field offices across Asia-Pacific, and representative offices in Washington, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and Sydney
- Major shareholders include Japan, the United States, China, India, and Australia
Connection to this news: The ADB's Asian Development Outlook is a flagship annual publication that provides growth projections and policy analysis for developing Asia — its upward revision for India signals strong institutional confidence in India's economic fundamentals despite global headwinds.
GDP Growth Forecasting — Methodology and Significance
International organisations like ADB, IMF, and World Bank publish periodic growth forecasts based on macroeconomic indicators: consumption trends, investment rates, fiscal policy, trade performance, and external risks. These forecasts influence sovereign credit ratings, FDI flows, and policy calibration.
- India's growth is measured as real GDP growth (adjusted for inflation), reported on a fiscal year basis (April–March)
- Key drivers cited in this revision: strong domestic consumption, easing financing conditions, lower US tariffs on Indian goods, and newly concluded free trade agreements
- India's fiscal year diverges from the calendar year used by most international organisations, requiring careful interpretation of FY-based forecasts
- India is the world's fifth-largest economy by nominal GDP and the fastest-growing major economy
Connection to this news: The ADB's upward revision to 6.9% for FY27 — even amid global geopolitical turbulence — underlines India's consumption-driven growth model and the economic dividend expected from its expanding FTA network.
India's Free Trade Agreement Strategy
India has significantly accelerated its trade agreement agenda in 2025-26. After years of cautious trade policy, India concluded the India–UK Free Trade Agreement (signed July 2025), the India–EU Free Trade Agreement (concluded January 2026), and is pursuing a GCC-India FTA, among others. As of 2025, India has 13 active trade agreements.
- The India–EU FTA, described as the "mother of all trade deals," was concluded after nearly two decades of negotiations
- The India–UK CETA provides reduced tariffs on UK exports to India up to £400 million annually at inception, potentially rising to £900 million after 10 years
- The GCC–India FTA negotiations, relaunched in November 2022, are expected to come into force in 2026
- Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal noted that nine FTAs signed in the last three-and-a-half years provide preferential access to 38 developed nations
Connection to this news: The ADB explicitly cites new trade agreements — particularly with the EU — as a structural driver behind the upgraded FY27 forecast, projecting their positive impact on export revenues and manufacturing investment.
Inflation Targeting and Monetary Policy Framework in India
India adopted a flexible inflation targeting (FIT) framework in 2016, mandating the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to maintain CPI inflation at 4% (+/- 2%). The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), constituted under the RBI Act (as amended in 2016), sets the policy repo rate to achieve this target.
- CPI inflation in India had eased to around 3.6% by early 2026, giving the RBI room to cut rates
- Inflation is forecast to rebound to 4.5% in FY27 — within the tolerance band but significantly above FY26 levels
- Key drivers of the FY27 inflation uptick: global oil price rise (West Asia crisis), food price recovery, currency depreciation, and rising precious metal prices
- RBI is mandated to submit a report to the government if inflation remains outside the 2–6% band for three consecutive quarters
Connection to this news: The ADB's inflation forecast for FY27 at 4.5% highlights the risk that global oil price shocks from the West Asia conflict could erode India's monetary policy gains and pressure household budgets.
Key Facts & Data
- ADB revised India's FY27 growth forecast upward to 6.9% (from 6.5% previously)
- FY28 growth projected at 7.3%, driven by trade agreement dividends and fiscal reforms
- Inflation projected at 2.1% in FY26, rising to 4.5% in FY27
- Developing Asia-Pacific regional growth: 5.1% in 2026 (down from 5.4% in 2025)
- ADB was established in 1966; headquartered in Manila, Philippines; has 69 member countries
- India's growth outpaces regional average by approximately 1.8 percentage points in FY27
- Key growth drivers: strong domestic demand, easing financing conditions, new FTAs, expected government salary revision
- Key risks: West Asia energy shock, global uncertainty, higher oil prices