The latest GDP numbers for the economy reveal an interesting phenomenon. The growth rates in both nominal and real terms are almost the same, at 7.8-8 per cent. This means there is hardly any ...
Does the GDP growth for the first quarter of 2025-26 present the correct picture? The real GDP growth for the June quarter of 2025-26, at 7.8 per cent, came as a surprise to most analysts, who had ...
There are certain unintended consequences of high inflation — not what is denoted by the CPI or WPI but the GDP deflator. A higher nominal GDP brought about by inflation also perversely contributes to ...
In FY23, the GDP deflator was 7% y-o-y. In the first three quarters of FY24, the deflator was around 1.1% y-o-y. Amid several factors – both structural and transient – that have contributed to an ...
The surprisingly low real GDP growth print of 5.4% for Q2FY25 was largely due to low government spending, particularly capex, and lacklustre manufacturing activity. But one more aspect played a key ...
Finance. LLC vs AOTC: What are the main differences between these education credits? Finance. Heating Bills 2022: How much will heating costs go up this winter? With inflation rates rising around the ...
Private capex is improving if the index of industrial production (IIP) numbers are any indication. File Photo: REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee India’s economic growth in the first quarter of FY2025-26 came ...
The reading assumes significance as the market is closely watching for signs of the economy’s ability to absorb the coming pressure from the 50% US tariffs that kicked in last week India’s ...
GDP grew 8.2% for the quarter ended September 2025. It caught everyone by surprise as it exceeded consensus estimates. Why has this happened? And what has inflation or GDP deflator got to do with this ...