India’s economy is receiving mixed signals both domestically and internationally. Following the peace accord between West Asia, the price of crude oil has fallen sharply. With such developments, the international brokerages have forecasted high GDP growth in India. However, on the other hand, El Niño effect leading to a poor monsoon season has raised concerns among domestic policy makers and economists.

The global investment banking firm Goldman Sachs has upgraded India’s growth forecast for 2026-27 from 6.1% to 6.5%. The rationale is based on the current quarter GDP which has been much better than expected along with lower crude oil prices helping India. EY on the other hand projects real GDP growth rate of 6.6 to 6.8 percent for the current fiscal year.

According to the agency, the country will easily navigate external uncertainties, supported by strong domestic fundamentals and the manufacturing and services sectors. While agencies are enthusiastic about India's petroleum refining ecosystem and infrastructure, agricultural and rural credit experts are reporting a different reality. India's $300 billion agricultural economy and rural demand are entirely dependent on the southwest monsoon.

L&T Finance economist Rajni Thakur said that low rainfall brings with it poor sentiment, which directly impacts the stock market and rural spending. Rural spending could see significant cuts during the festive season. According to Yuvika Singhal of QuantEco Research, a 10 percent monsoon shortfall could increase consumer inflation by up to 1 percent.

India’s economy is receiving mixed signals both domestically and internationally. Following the peace accord between West Asia, the price of crude oil has fallen sharply. With such developments, the international brokerages have forecasted high GDP growth in India. However, on the other hand, El Niño effect leading to a poor monsoon season has raised concerns among domestic policy makers and economists.

The global investment banking firm Goldman Sachs has upgraded India’s growth forecast for 2026-27 from 6.1% to 6.5%. The rationale is based on the current quarter GDP which has been much better than expected along with lower crude oil prices helping India. EY on the other hand projects real GDP growth rate of 6.6 to 6.8 percent for the current fiscal year.

According to the agency, the country will easily navigate external uncertainties, supported by strong domestic fundamentals and the manufacturing and services sectors. While agencies are enthusiastic about India's petroleum refining ecosystem and infrastructure, agricultural and rural credit experts are reporting a different reality. India's $300 billion agricultural economy and rural demand are entirely dependent on the southwest monsoon.

L&T Finance economist Rajni Thakur said that low rainfall brings with it poor sentiment, which directly impacts the stock market and rural spending. Rural spending could see significant cuts during the festive season. According to Yuvika Singhal of QuantEco Research, a 10 percent monsoon shortfall could increase consumer inflation by up to 1 percent.