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Moneycontrol Pro Weekender | Decoding India's Q2 Growth Stunner

India's economy just posted growth in Q2 that beat every forecast, but the real story is messier than the headline

November 29, 2025 / 09:01 IST
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Dear Reader,

The Indian economy continues to make practitioners of the dismal science look silly. Real GDP growth of 8.2 percent for the July-September 2025 quarter blew away all estimates. Most economists had expected growth to decelerate from 7.8 percent in Q1 to between 7 percent and 7.5 percent in Q2.  The strong growth shows that the Indian economy has strong momentum, in spite of Trump’s tariffs.

One reason for the bounce in the real growth rate was the very low GDP deflator in Q2, which was as low as 0.46 percent, down from 0.9 percent in Q1. Retail inflation was 1.7 percent in the September quarter compared to 2.7 percent in the June quarter. The wholesale price index growth was 0.02 percent in Q2 compared to 0.26 percent in the June quarter. The GDP deflator is supposed to reflect the overall inflation in the economy and at 0.46 percent it’s flirting with deflation.

But perhaps all that it really reflects is a problem with the method of computing the deflator, as the IMF has graded India’s national income statistics at C, the second-lowest grade. At the same time, it's also true that everybody knows the problems with the data and the estimates should have reflected that. That the numbers have beaten the estimates and by such a wide margin reflects the strength of the Indian economy.

There was also a base effect that boosted growth. Base effect refers to how growth rates are calculated against the previous year's quarter — Weak growth last year makes this year's numbers look better. Note, though, that there was also a favourable base effect for nominal growth and yet nominal GDP growth fell slightly from 8.8 percent in Q1 to 8.7 percent for Q2.

Private consumption growth at constant prices has been strong at 7.95 percent in Q2, compared to 7.05 percent in Q1. Growth in gross fixed capital formation, on the other hand, has been lower than in Q1. But these numbers should be taken with a grain of salt — ‘discrepancies’ amounted to 3.3 percent of GDP. These ‘discrepancies’ will later be allocated to the other heads.

The Gross Value Added numbers give a more reliable picture. While growth in manufacturing went up from 7.7 percent in Q1 to 9.1 percent in Q2, the truth is the base effect was very strong. Q1 FY2025 had a manufacturing growth rate of 7.6 percent and that slumped to 2.2 percent in Q2. In construction, despite a favourable base effect, the growth rate fell from 7.6 percent in Q1 FY26 to 7.2 percent in Q2.

The real buoyancy was in one particular part of the services sector. GVA growth in the ‘Financial, Real Estate & Professional Services’ went up from 9.5 percent in Q1 to 10.2 percent in Q2, in spite of an unfavourable base effect.

What of the future? The GST cuts should continue to boost consumption, but note that the base effect for GDP growth turns unfavourable from Q3. The deflator too may not remain so supportive. On the flip side, a US trade deal with lower tariffs should lead to higher exports and will support growth.

As of end-October 2025, gross tax revenues for the fiscal year were up a mere 4 percent compared to April-October 2024. The low growth in nominal GDP combined with the tax cuts, is having an impact. Corporate earnings growth too will feel the knock-on effects.

The immediate question, of course, is whether the RBI will look at the solid real headline growth rate and the robust consumption growth and decide not to cut rates, or whether it will look beneath the hood and decide that things are not as rosy as they appear to be.

Cheers,

Manas Chakravarty
In case you missed them, here are some of the other stories and insights we published this week, apart from our technical picks in the equity, commodity, and forex markets:


Stocks

Weekly Tactical Pick: Why this regional jewellery player is likely to shine, Home First Finance, Galaxy Surfactants, Bharat Dynamics, Escorts Kubota, Control Print, Royal Orchid Hotels, Zensar, Cera Sanitaryware, SP Apparels, INOX India, SBFC Finance, VIP, V2 Retail, Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels

Financial Times
Is China winning the innovation race?
OpenAI partners amass $100bn debt pile
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Howard Marks: 'People are shakily optimistic'

BHP’s fleeting Anglo bid shows the race for copper is heating up

Japan needs to end its dangerous debt delusion

Martin Wolf: The fracturing of the world economy


Markets

Unpacking the cash market surge

Is the Nifty rally built on sand?

Will rate cuts revive market sentiments?

Funds build cash, valuations bite: Why midcaps may stay on the backfoot

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India's Rs 7,280 crore rare earth push -- Should investors join the race?

Personal Finance: Gold is glittering, equity is holding up -- What must investors do?

Record Rs 7 lakh crore DII buying so far in 2025 in Indian markets and counting

Companies & Sectors

Higher basic pay, 48-hour work weeks: India’s IT sector prepares for rising costs under new labour codes

Why Kwality Wall’s 0% EBITDA margin is not as chilling as it appears

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India Inc return ratios hit a 14-year high, sign of capex revival?

As MNCs go missing, domestic firms step up to fill India’s pharma innovation gap

Festive spark for QSR, but recovery still half-baked? Experts weigh in

IT sector continues to navigate uncertainty

The coming slowdown in India’s renewable energy sector

Rising lead prices apart, there are other posers to battery makers’ earnings

Corporate hospitals cash in on surge in international patients as geopolitical tensions ease


Economy & Policy

IMF to India: Keep policy flexible until US tariff uncertainty clears

Why the banking liquidity crunch will continue

Credit Boom: Businesses see financial flows jump sharply in first 7 months of FY26

Rupee’s slide past 89 to the dollar: Why it happened, what it means for stakeholders

The new Labour Codes do not create flexibility — They just make it legal

Flash PMIs paint picture of resilient but fragile global economy at year-end

India’s capex story: Govt spending up 40%, order books rise 21%, says CareEdge

How competitive is India on the corporate tax front?

What to look for beneath Friday’s Q2 GDP headline

Eight years on, the IBC is buckling under delays, haircuts, dodgy deals

Sandesara Settlement: Has the SC just opened a Pandora’s box?

India's Employment Paradox: Low joblessness, high unemployment registration, and millions of unemployable graduates

Agricultural exports will likely beat Trump’s tariffs, wars

Pro Economic Tracker


Geopolitics & Geoeconomics

Ukraine peace push a test of global power hierarchy

Putin's Delhi Visit: How a fighter jet deal could redraw geopolitical lines

Can climate commitment rise from the ashes of COP30 fire?

Startups & Tech

Startup Street: The hidden perils of circular deals in the tech world

Will the AI bubble burst? Or just the LLM bubble?

Can the misuse of AI really be stopped?

Accenture explores Agentic AI for high-volume enterprise workflows, says India head

Govt to build Agentic AI ‘digital assistant’ for DigiLocker; will autonomously fetch and verify documents

 

Manas Chakravarty
Manas Chakravarty
first published: Nov 29, 2025 09:00 am

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