Economic Survey 2025–26 – Macroeconomic Outlook

Syllabus: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment

Survey Approach and Policy Philosophy

  • The Survey emphasises evidence-based analysis, avoiding sensationalism amid global economic uncertainty.
  • It outlines a medium-term economic and governance framework for future-oriented policymaking.
  • Introduces the idea of an “entrepreneurial state” that is risk-taking, adaptive, and experimental.
  • Advocates a dynamic policy shift, encouraging learning from failure to accelerate long-term growth.

Global and Domestic Economic Context

  • Assigns a 10%–20% probability of a global crisis worse than 2008 in 2026.
  • Best-case scenario projects continued global fragility, even under stable conditions.
  • Depicts India’s economy as relatively stable, supported by current data and indicators.
  • Simultaneously flags emerging domestic vulnerabilities requiring early policy attention.

Rupee Movement and Structural Challenges

  • Attributes rupee depreciation to capital flows toward advanced AI economies and safe-haven assets.
  • Notes weak rupee benefits exporters but raises import costs for an import-dependent economy.
  • Highlights India’s limited strategic role in global merchandise supply chains.
  • Calls for building “strategic resilience” and long-term “strategic indispensability”.

Fiscal Strategy and Centre–State Dynamics

  • Supports greater fiscal flexibility for the Centre under geopolitical and geoeconomic uncertainty.
  • Acknowledges the Centre more than halved its fiscal deficit ratio in five years.
  • Warns of rising State revenue deficits and fiscal stress from populist expenditure.
  • Critiques unconditional cash transfers, despite their political appeal during election cycles.

Emerging Risks Highlighted

  • Flags ethanol production’s potential impact on food security.
  • Notes real economic costs of the renewable energy transition.
  • Highlights fodder shortages affecting agricultural sustainability.
  • Raises concerns over “compulsive scrolling” and smartphone-related behavioural impacts.

Policy Significance

  • Positions the Survey as a forward-looking policy compass for growth and governance.
  • Encourages balanced attention to stability, resilience, and structural reform priorities.

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