India Economy Thread

Loss-making in what sense? Maybe losing on operating costs but perhaps gaining in economic productivity due to efficient transport and enhanced connectivity. At least, I would imagine that would be the most reasonable justification for operational losses.
Not really ,they are built with huge capex & are at operational loss all due to low demand in majority of lines.
 

Hopefully reality is same as prediction. 3 quarter will be soft and 4th a good one if we have a deal. We are already diversifying exports and new reforms are coming in winter session.
 
Big bills in winter session
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


Thank god for Trump Tariffs. Finally some of the much needed reforms!
 

much needed policy. India has 4th highest reserve of light rare earths. Gotta start somewhere.
 

India has made great strides in solar to the point we have greatly slowed down addition of coal plants. My Coal India stocks are not doing so well.
 
This post belongs here actually:

Refrain:
🎶We have the money 🎶 or we are the biggest Banyas.
Famous Indian Banya statements:
  • USA will always be pro-India, and anti-Pakistan because the USA is the largest trading partner of India with $131.84 billion trade in 2024-25, with India maintaining a trade surplus with the US. Pakistan doesn't come close,
    • Result : "Dunkey deportation" , 50% tarrifs, Operation Sindoor Ceasefire, 7 planes shot down insult, H1-B visa fees. choking off cheap Russian oil.
  • China will always be pro-India and anti-Pakistan because China is India's second-largest trading partner, with trade totaling $127.71 billion., we do more business with China than Pakistan
    • Result: JF-17 and J-10 C fighter jets, PL-15 missiles, HQ-9 air defenses, Hangor class submarines for Pakistan.Intelligence sharing. "One front two enemies " Lt.General Rahui Singh Vice Chief of Army Staff. 20 Indian troops killed in Galwan
  • Russia will always be pro-India because India buys Russian Oil and has the time tested Soviet Union era military economic relationship.
    • Result: Russia supplying Mig 35 Helicopters, RD-93 and RD-93 MA improved fighter jet engines for JF-17 fighters.. Also supplied IL-76 tanker aircraft. 185 JF-17 fighter jets built using RD-93 family of Engines,
  • Saudi Arabia will always be pro-India and anti-Pakistan because Saudi Arabia has invested billions of dollars in India
    • Result: Mutual defence pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
  • Turkey will always be pro-India and anti-Pakistani because hundreds of thousands of Indian tourists visit Turkey and spend billions of dollars supporting the Turkish industry
    • Result: Turkey supplied combat and surveillance drones and naval frigates to Pakistan. Turkey and Pakistan collaborating on building the KAAN 5th generation fighter,
The list goes on.. Qatar, UAE, Kuwait Malaysia, Canada, etc, .. all are supposed to be pro-india because "India has the money"
The results are always different.
Do you often talk to yourself ? Not good.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


There are full websites tracking Indian economy. I just post snippets here and there.
 

IMF gives India a ‘C’ on its GDP and other national accounts data, the second-lowest grade​


The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) annual review has given India’s national accounts statistics, which includes key figures such as Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross Value Added (GVA), a grade of ‘C’, the second-lowest grade there is.

According to the IMF, this grade means the data available “have some shortcomings that somewhat hamper surveillance”. This is of particular significance as the government will release the national accounts data for Q2 of this financial year on Friday (November 28, 2028).

“National accounts data are available at adequate frequency and timeliness and provide broadly adequate granularity,” the IMF noted in its annual Article IV assessment of India’s economic framework. “However, some methodological weaknesses somewhat hamper surveillance and warrant an overall sectoral rating for the national accounts of C.”

Overall, across all data categories, India has received a grade of ‘B’. There are four grades in total: A, B, C and D.

‘Sizeable discrepancies’
For example, it highlighted an outdated base year of 2011-12 on which the data is based, and the use of wholesale price indices as data sources for deflators due to a lack of producer prices indices.

It further pointed out periodic “sizeable discrepancies” between the production and expenditure approaches of measuring GDP, “that may indicate the need to enhance the coverage of the expenditure approach data and the informal sector”.

The Indian government has, from the beginning, used the income approach to measure GDP by measuring the incomes of the government, people, and companies. However, it also provides an estimate based on the expenditure approach, which attempts to quantify GDP through the spending done by these entities.

Often, due to the differing data sources and their coverage, the two estimates of GDP differ, which has attracted criticism from some economists.

Finally, the IMF also highlighted the lack of seasonally adjusted data and “room for improvement of other statistical techniques” used in the quarterly national accounts data.


The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) annual review has given India’s national accounts statistics, which includes key figures such as Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross Value Added (GVA), a grade of ‘C’, the second-lowest grade there is.

According to the IMF, this grade means the data available “have some shortcomings that somewhat hamper surveillance”. This is of particular significance as the government will release the national accounts data for Q2 of this financial year on Friday (November 28, 2028).

“National accounts data are available at adequate frequency and timeliness and provide broadly adequate granularity,” the IMF noted in its annual Article IV assessment of India’s economic framework. “However, some methodological weaknesses somewhat hamper surveillance and warrant an overall sectoral rating for the national accounts of C.”

Overall, across all data categories, India has received a grade of ‘B’. There are four grades in total: A, B, C and D.

‘Sizeable discrepancies’
For example, it highlighted an outdated base year of 2011-12 on which the data is based, and the use of wholesale price indices as data sources for deflators due to a lack of producer prices indices.

It further pointed out periodic “sizeable discrepancies” between the production and expenditure approaches of measuring GDP, “that may indicate the need to enhance the coverage of the expenditure approach data and the informal sector”.

The Indian government has, from the beginning, used the income approach to measure GDP by measuring the incomes of the government, people, and companies. However, it also provides an estimate based on the expenditure approach, which attempts to quantify GDP through the spending done by these entities.

Often, due to the differing data sources and their coverage, the two estimates of GDP differ, which has attracted criticism from some economists.

Finally, the IMF also highlighted the lack of seasonally adjusted data and “room for improvement of other statistical techniques” used in the quarterly national accounts data.

“On granularity, further breakdown of Gross Fixed Capital Formation by institutional sector (published with a significant lag) and further disaggregation of the quarterly production and expenditure approach estimates would allow for a more detailed analysis of economic trends,” the IMF said.

Inflation data also has issues
Regarding India’s main inflation measure, the Consumer Price Index, the IMF graded India a ‘B’, which means the data provided “have some shortcomings but are broadly adequate for surveillance”.

It said that while the CPI data scores well on its frequency and timeliness, coming as it does once a month and with only a month’s lag, the rating of ‘B’ reflects the outdated CPI base year, items basket, and weights (set in 2011-12), “implying that the CPI basket likely fails to accurately represent current spending habits”.

It is important to note that the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation is currently working on updating the GDP and CPI base years and methodology to make them more up to date. The new series of both datasets are expected to be released in early or mid 2026.

The other facets of government data — government finance statistics, external sector statistics, monetary and financial statistics, and inter-sectoral consistency — were all scored ‘B’, with the IMF pointing out strengths and weaknesses in each of them.

Notably, India’s national accounts statistics received a ‘C’ grade in last year’s review as well, with the IMF noting this year that “data weaknesses have remained broadly unchanged” since the last report, but acknowledged that plans to upgrade real sector statistics “are advancing”.

 
For example, it highlighted an outdated base year of 2011-12 on which the data is based, and the use of wholesale price indices as data sources for deflators due to a lack of producer prices indices.
Yes, it was last updated some 15 years back. Next rebasing is scheduled for FY2026-27 i.e. a few months. Hope it leads to increase in documented GDP size.
 
@CallSignMaverick

Hope it leads to increase in documented GDP size.

Lets hope so. My rough calculation is that it will result in a 10% upside to GDP which will stand at USD 4.5 trillion. By end 2027 we will be at USD 5 trillion which will take us to #3 in GDP ranking.

MHTMH

Regards
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Pakistan Defence Latest

Latest Posts

Back
Top