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HomeNewsOpinionOPINION | IMF’s C Grade and India’s Economic Resilience: A closer look

OPINION | IMF’s C Grade and India’s Economic Resilience: A closer look

The IMF retains a ‘C’ grade for India's GDP data due to some shortcomings, yet praises India’s impressive 8.2% GDP growth, fiscal management, digital infrastructure, and robust job creation under Modi’s leadership

December 03, 2025 / 12:49 IST
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The IMF has flagged areas where India must do better, including faster fiscal consolidation once the capex cycle matures

In its annual staff report for India for 2025, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) retained its “C” grade for India’s national account statistics, or GDP data, which simply means the data provided to the Fund may have “some shortcomings that somewhat hamper surveillance.” It doesn’t mean the IMF thinks India is faking its GDP. The same IMF report, in fact, acknowledges that India is actively working to address these issues. A major rebasing of National Accounts and CPI by the Modi government is underway, with a planned launch in early 2026. This update to a Base Year from 2011–12 to 2022–23 for GDP and IIP and a 2024 Base Year for CPI, along with methodological improvements, are welcome steps. Importantly, within 48 hours of the Q2FY26 numbers being released, the IMF’s Asia-Pacific Department issued a statement saying the new data “validates our view that India remains the standout performer among emerging markets” and hinted that the October 2025 WEO forecast would be revised upward by at least 50–70 basis points. In diplomatic language, that is the equivalent of a standing ovation. IMF’s “C” grade is merely routine caution, not condemnation. It simply means there are broad areas that need improvement.

Strong IMF Praise and India’s 8.2% Growth Print

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Again, what Modi naysayers conveniently forget is that India has received a pretty good “B” on inflation control, monetary transmission, digital public infrastructure and labour market reforms. Any fair reading of the IMF report, especially when placed alongside India’s just-released 8.2% real GDP growth for the September quarter of FY2025–26 (Q2FY26), looks like a resounding vote of confidence in the world’s fastest-growing major economy, under the aegis of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The 8.2% print is not a flash in the pan. What makes the 8.2% number breathtaking is its composition, with private final consumption expenditure (PFCE) up 7.9% in real terms, the strongest in 14 quarters. Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) surged 7.3%, led by both government capex and a sharp rebound in corporate investment. Manufacturing expanded 9.1%, services 9.2%, and even agriculture, despite an uneven monsoon, clocked 3.5%. On the demand side, net exports contributed positively for the first time in seven quarters as merchandise exports rose 5.6% despite “Trump tariffs”.

The “B” on inflation is noteworthy. Headline CPI has consistently fallen in the last few months, with September and October retail inflation at 1.44% and 0.25% respectively. The IMF explicitly praises the “flexible inflation-targeting framework” and the “smooth transmission” seen in 2025. Another area coming in for effusive praise from the IMF is India’s digital public infrastructure, with UPI now handling almost 16 billion transactions every single month. The report says these tools under PM Modi have “meaningfully enhanced financial inclusion and tax compliance”.