By Dr. Nilanjan Banik
The Indian economy, to quote from Charles Dickens’ novel, looks like A Tale of Two Cities. Recent estimates suggest India’s real GDP expanded by 7.8%, with strong growth noted across sectors: services (9.3%), manufacturing (10.7%), and construction (7.4%). Consumption expenditure, which is the largest component of GDP explaining 58% of GDP, also grew at around 7.6%, pointing to the resilience of the Indian economy. Other macro indicators such as Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections, sales of automobile, two-wheeler, and FMCG products complement the healthy growth in consumption expenditure, with gross GST collections growing around 7.7% in Q4 of FY 2026, passenger vehicles rising 17%, two-wheelers increasing 25%, and FMCG products posting 12% growth — the highest since June 2022.
Yet all is not well on the external front: the Indian Rupee is depreciating, the current account deficit (CAD) is widening, and net foreign direct investment (FDI) is falling. Interestingly, the depreciation of Rupee against the US dollar is not a recent phenomenon. Between 2005 and 2024, the Rupee has, on average, depreciated by around 3.5% annually. An analysis of long-term data suggests that the average annual depreciation of the Rupee was 0.4% between 2000 and 2004. The depreciation accelerated significantly after that, with the rupee depreciating on average by 3.4% annually between 2005 and 2014. This trend remained largely unchanged between 2015 and 2025, with the Rupee depreciating on average by 3.5% annually.
However, what is worrying is that in recent times, the depreciation of the Rupee has broken all earlier records. Among countries that are on a flexible exchange rate and not on a managed or fixed float — for example, Japanese Yen (6.6%), South Korean Won (7%), Indonesian Rupiah (9.3%), and the Philippine Peso (10.3%), to name a few — the Indian Rupee has depreciated the most over the last one year by around 11.2%.
Net FDI inflow is also falling. Recent estimates from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) suggest that total amount of dollars flowing out of the country exceeded inflows by $30.8 billion in FY 26, a more than six-fold increase over FY25. India witnessed a balance of payments (BOP) surplus as recently as FY23 but took a hit, falling into negative territory from FY24 onwards. The data for FY 26 is until December 2026, with a worsening trend with the continuation of Iran-Israel-US war, starting February 2026.
BOP is the sum of the current account and the capital account. The current account captures surpluses or deficits in tradable items, while the capital account records investment flows (both direct and portfolio investments), external borrowings, and asset transfer. Over the last 5 years, any deficit owing because of trade deficits were largely financed by the surplus in services trade. India has been importing crude oil worth $130–$150 billion annually, and a significant portion of this import bill has been financed by the surplus in services, which has averaged over $240 billion during the past three years.For instance, during FY 25, India’s overall merchandize trade deficit stood at $251.6 billion in FY25, down from $286.9 billion in the previous year.
However, this trend has changed in 2026. There are two major reasons. Indian stock market has been on a downward trend.FPI are pulling out the money from India to the tune of Rs 2 lakh crore in FY 26. The recent emergence of agentic AI models has raised concerns about the future of Indian software exports, which no longer appear as promising as before. Meanwhile, the US and Taiwanese stock markets are attracting renewed investor interest, driven by strong performance in microchip and AI stocks.
Second, the war in the Middle East has also led to higher prices for crude oil, fertilizers, and chemical products, adversely affecting India’s external sector performance measured in term of BOP. The war and higher price of imports have led to dollar appreciating against the Rupee, further worsening the CAD. India has to import almost 90% of its energy requirement. Every $10 rise in global Brent crude prices is estimated to widen India’s CAD by about 0.3% to 0.5% of GDP, translating to billions of dollars.
Brent crude was trading between $66-$70 per barrel before the start of the war in February 2026, reaching to a high of $126 on 29 April 2026. Now, with the UAE’s exit from OPEC, Brent crude may continue to hover around $80 a barrel for the remainder of 2026, even if the Iran and the US decide to end the war. If the disruption persisted through the rest the rest of 2026, Brent could average $91 per barrel in fourth quarter of 2026.
Returning to the tale of two cities — for the Indian economy, the more consequential headwinds appear to be largely exogenous: geopolitical conflicts and the structural disruption of AI-driven automation, both of which lie beyond the government’s direct control. Where the government does have meaningful control, however, is in creating conditions that attract sustained Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) inflows, and make India a better place to do business.
For instance, at last Friday’s monetary policy meeting, the RBI outlined measures to simplify access for overseas investors to government bonds and equities. Separately, the government announced a reduction in capital gains taxes on bond investments by FPIs. The last time the Indian government initiated a bold reform measure on September 20, 2019, when it executed the largest corporate tax reduction in three decades– slashing the base corporate income tax rate for domestic companies from 30% to 22%.
The move, introduced by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, was aimed at boosting domestic investment and reviving economic growth. However, larger corporates largely used the windfall not to reinvest within India, but to acquire foreign assets abroad. Corporate investment, by and large, remained subdued. This time, the focus needs to shift toward more targeted interventions — extending tax benefits or introducing interest subvention schemes for the MSME sector, strengthening incentives for setting up Global Capability Centers (GCCs), and deepening support for India’s start-up ecosystem. Unlike the exogenous pressures of geopolitical conflict and AI-driven disruption, these are policy which are firmly within the government’s control, and the onus is on it to deploy them wisely.(IPA Service)
(The author is Professor, Mahindra University).
