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'Strong GDP, weak pulse': India's growth masks deep economic faultlines, says report

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NEW DELHI: India’s GDP growth for the January-March quarter of FY25 may have surprised on the upside, but a new report warns that the robust headline figure masks an economy still struggling under the surface.

Systematix Research, in a sharp critique, said the 4QFY25 growth “continues to be dependent on public spending-led construction,” while key indicators point to deeper structural weaknesses. “The upside surprise in Indian GDP growth makes a robust headline, but it masks underlying weaknesses,” the report stated.

Cracks behind the headline numbers
Among the red flags, the report noted that money supply grew much slower than nominal GDP, raising concerns about the credibility of the growth data. Additionally, personal consumption expenditure grew faster than the actual sales volume of consumer goods, indicating a disconnect between reported demand and real consumption.

While government capital spending surged, private investment likely contracted. “Public spending is not crowding in private investment,” the report noted, suggesting that the government’s infrastructure push is failing to stimulate broader economic momentum.


Demand still fragile
Household income remains under stress, retail lending growth has slowed, and reduced government subsidies have added to the pressure. Net indirect taxes rose to their highest level since June 2018, which the report said has further squeezed demand.

Meanwhile, even as the current account deficit narrowed, the total trade contraction signals weakening domestic and global demand. “There is a growing disconnect between reported GDP figures and the on-ground economic situation,” the report said.

Outlook hinges on rural consumption
Systematix points to rural demand revival and agricultural strength as key to future growth. But with private capex still elusive and global uncertainties mounting, a meaningful recovery may remain sluggish.

While the Reserve Bank of India may step in with easing measures if inflation stays low, the report warns that low inflation itself reflects weak incomes and demand, not price stability.

Global headwinds ahead
On the international front, the report cautioned that panic buying in global trade, in anticipation of possible tariffs under a second Trump administration, could push the US towards stagflation, a risk that would ripple through emerging markets like India. With India’s trade-to-GDP ratio already falling, the country may find itself exposed to external shocks without the cushion of strong export performance.

“In the absence of a turnaround in productive employment,” the report concludes, “India’s growth story risks becoming increasingly imbalanced and fragile.”
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