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OECD Cuts, UBS Lifts India’s FY26 Growth Forecast: A Tale of Two Outlooks

In a fresh update on India’s economic outlook, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has revised India’s FY26 GDP growth forecast down to 6.3%, citing risks from rising global trade tensions and higher US tariffs. In contrast, UBS Securities has raised its projection to 6.4%, backed by strong domestic demand, hopes of a US-India trade deal, and a favorable monsoon. These contrasting forecasts highlight the complex interplay of global uncertainties and domestic strengths shaping India’s growth trajectory.

Why in News?

OECD lowered India’s FY26 growth forecast from 6.4% to 6.3%, and FY27 to 6.4%. UBS raised India’s FY26 forecast from 6.0% to 6.4%, indicating improved domestic factors. The divergence reflects differing views on external trade risks vs. domestic demand drivers. The forecasts are significant as they influence policy decisions, investments, and market sentiment.

Aims & Objectives of Economic Forecasts

  • Help governments and investors in planning and risk assessment.
  • Indicate the health of the economy through data-driven projections.
  • Signal upcoming policy shifts, such as rate cuts or trade agreements.

OECD Forecast – Concerns & Cautions

  • FY26 Growth: Revised down to 6.3% (from 6.4%)
  • FY27 Growth: Lowered by 20 bps to 6.4%

Key Concerns

  • Higher US tariffs on Indian exports may hurt key sectors like textiles, chemicals, and pharma.
  • Potential poor monsoon may affect agriculture and rural incomes, spiking food inflation.
  • Trade tensions may discourage investment in tradable sectors.

Static Fact

  • OECD is a 38-member group of mostly developed economies, providing economic insights and policy advice.

Rationale

  • Private consumption to improve on the back of rising real incomes, lower inflation, and tax relief.
  • Hopes of a US-India trade deal softening tariff concerns.
  • Investment growth from declining interest rates and robust public capital spending.
  • Better monsoon outlook expected to boost rural demand and contain food inflation.

UBS View

  • RBI may cut interest rates by an additional 50-75 basis points to spur growth.
  • Monetary policy will play a key role in sustaining growth momentum.

Global Perspective – OECD’s Global Warning

  • Global growth forecast revised down to 2.9% for 2025–26 (from 3.3%)
  • Key reasons
  • Trade war threats (Trump-era tariffs returning)
  • Tighter financial conditions, weak investor confidence, and policy uncertainty
OECD Cuts, UBS Lifts India's FY26 Growth Forecast: A Tale of Two Outlooks_4.1

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