India’s IIP Growth Slips to 4.1% in March 2026, Lowest in Five Months
The industrial output growth of the country eased to the 4.1% in March 2026 and it marks the five-month low. This growth signals the slowdown in the economic momentum towards the end of this financial year. According to data released by the National Statistics Office the moderation in the growth was largely due to the weaker performance in the power and the manufacturing sectors, also the mining sector have showed the resilience.
The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) tracks the performance of various important industrial sectors like the manufacturing, mining and the electricity.
It also serves as the crucial indicator of the economic health, demand trends and the industrial capacity utilization.
The slowdown in the IIP growth will often indicates the,
The Manufacturing which holds the largest weight in the IIP had grew by the 4.3% in March 2026 and it is only slightly higher than 4% in March 2025.
This suggests that it lack the strong acceleration in factory activity.
Also the continued cautious demand environment and the possible global and domestic uncertainties have affected the production.
The electricity sector saw the sharp slowdown and growing just 0.8% which is compared to 7.5% in the same month last year.
This decline is attributed to the reduced power demand and the supply-side disruptions.
Also the external geopolitical factors like the West Asia crisis have triggered the outcome impact.
The power sectors weak performance have significantly pulled down the overall industrial growth.
In contrast the mining output have grew 5.5% and it is showing the strong improvement from 1.2% a year ago.
This indicates the improved extraction activity along with the better utilisation of natural resources. It also supports to the core industries.
The Month of the March 2026 figures represents the lowest growth since the October 2025 when the industrial output had dropped to 0.5%.
Additionally in the month of February 2026 the growth was revised slightly down to 5.1%.
The performance in the March 2025’s growth stood at the 3.9%.
This trend showcase that the growth remains positive but the momentum is weakening.
For the full financial year of the 2025-26 the industrial growth stood at 4.1% and it nearly unchanged from 4% in 2024-25.
This indicates that the stability in overall industrial activity and the uneven sectoral performance.
It also has lack of strong acceleration despite recovery efforts.
Q. Which of the following sectors has the highest weight in the IIP?
A. Mining
B. Manufacturing
C. Electricity
D. Services
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