Business
Budget 2026: 8 key takeaways from CEA’s economic survey briefing– Check full list
New Delhi: The Economic Survey 2025-26, tabled in Parliament on January 29, 2026, by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman ahead of the Union Budget, highlights India’s economic performance in a challenging global environment. Prepared under Chief Economic Adviser V. Anantha Nageswaran, the Survey reviews growth trends, fiscal management and sectoral developments while flagging global risks such as geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation and policy uncertainty.
Here are eight key highlights from his remarks.
India Remains the Fastest-Growing Major Economy
India’s real GDP growth for FY26 (2025-26) is estimated at 7.4 per cent, while Gross Value Added (GVA) growth stands at 7.3 per cent, according to the First Advance Estimates. This marks the fourth consecutive year that India has emerged as the fastest-growing major economy. The strong performance comes despite global economic volatility, reflecting the resilience of domestic demand and macroeconomic stability.
Growth Outlook For FY27
Looking ahead, the Survey projects real GDP growth in the range of 6.8 per cent to 7.2 per cent for FY27. Importantly, India’s potential growth rate has been upgraded to around 7 per cent up from 6.5 per cent a few years ago. The improvement is attributed to sustained structural reforms, higher capital formation, labour formalisation, digital infrastructure expansion, regulatory simplification and continuous skilling initiatives.
Consumption And Investment Drive Momentum
Domestic demand continues to anchor growth. Private Final Consumption Expenditure grew by around 7 per cent in FY26 and now accounts for 61.5 per cent of GDP — the highest share since 2012. Low inflation, stable employment conditions, strong agricultural output supporting rural demand, and resilient urban spending have contributed to the consumption boost.
Investment activity has also remained steady. Gross Fixed Capital Formation expanded by nearly 7.8 per cent and remained close to 30 per cent of GDP. Public capital expenditure continues to support infrastructure creation, while private investment is showing signs of revival.
Inflation Remains Well-Anchored
The Survey notes that headline CPI inflation averaged around 1.7 per cent in FY26 (up to December), marking one of the lowest levels in recent years. Core inflation has also remained subdued, reflecting improved supply-side conditions. Lower inflation has helped protect household purchasing power and created a favourable environment for growth.
Fiscal Consolidation On Track
The government’s fiscal consolidation path remains intact. The fiscal deficit for FY25 came in better than budgeted at around 4.8 per cent of GDP, and the target for FY26 has been set at 4.4 per cent. General government debt-to-GDP has declined by about 7.1 percentage points since 2020, even as public investment has been maintained at elevated levels. Strengthening revenue receipts have further supported fiscal stability.
Financial Sector Shows Strength
India’s financial sector continues to remain robust. Gross NPAs have declined to a multi-decadal low of 2.2% as of September 2025. Despite global financial turbulence, the banking system remains well-capitalised, supporting credit growth and overall economic activity.
Sectoral Trends And Structural Focus
The services sector has led the growth momentum with GVA expansion of around 9.1–9.3 per cent, though expansion has been broad-based across agriculture, industry and services. The Survey emphasises the need for people-centric urbanisation reforms to reduce congestion and productivity losses. It also highlights improving manufacturing competitiveness through logistics upgrades, correcting inverted duty structures and leveraging trade agreements such as the proposed FTA with Europe. Export resilience remains a priority amid rising global tariffs and supply chain re-routing.
Global Risks And The Road Ahead
Globally, economies are facing deteriorating fiscal balances, rising bond yields, trade weaponisation and supply chain disruptions. While India retains strong macroeconomic buffers and structural strengths, the Survey calls for caution rather than pessimism. It stresses the need to build resilience against external vulnerabilities, including volatile capital flows and currency pressures. Manufacturing expansion is seen as crucial for strengthening the rupee, while the rise of artificial intelligence also poses new challenges related to skill gaps and structural shifts in the labour market.
Overall, the Economic Survey 2025-26 presents a picture of an economy that remains strong, stable and reform-oriented, even as it navigates an increasingly uncertain global landscape.
Business
Ads for British beef and milk banned following Chris Packham complaint
Two ads promoting British beef and milk have been banned after television presenter and environmental campaigner Chris Packham complained that they misled consumers about the products’ carbon footprints.
Both ads for the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board’s (AHDB) Let’s Eat Balanced campaign used the carbon footprint of British beef and milk to promote the products, firstly stating: “British beef not only tastes great, but has a carbon footprint that’s half the global average*.”
The asterisk linked to text that stated: “Full lifecycle emissions of CO2 eq (carbon dioxide equivalent) per kg of beef.”
The ad for milk stated: “British milk not only tastes good, but is also produced to world-class standards, and has a carbon footprint a third lower than the global average.”
Packham complained to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) that the ads, and specifically the carbon footprint claims, were misleading as they did not reflect the full environmental impact of British meat and dairy.
The AHDB said the ads’ mention of carbon emissions would be understood in relation to the environmental impact of beef and milk that occurred between the “cradle-to-retail” stages.
But the ASA said the average consumer “being reasonably well-informed, observant and circumspect” would understand the claims to apply beyond the retail stage and include actions such as cooking and wastage.
The ASA said: “While we acknowledged the potential difficulties in producing post-retail emissions data, the claims in the ads suggested those emissions were included and we therefore expected the evidence provided to also include them.
“We therefore concluded that the evidence presented was insufficient to support the full life-cycle claims in the ads, which was how the average consumer was likely to interpret them.
“We reminded AHDB that environmental claims should be based on the full life cycle unless the ad stated otherwise.”
AHDB’s director of communications and market development, Will Jackson, said: “Let’s Eat Balanced is doing what it was designed to do, providing clear, factual, evidence-led information about British food, nutrition and farming standards.
“Since the investigation began, we have conducted independent consumer research which found that the majority of respondents interpreted these adverts as relating to the production phase only, from farm to retail.
“This research provides important insight into consumer understanding and supports our belief that consumers were not misled by the information we shared in these two specific adverts.”
Business
Gen Z pros embrace ‘portfolio careers’ as side hustles surge – The Times of India
BENGALURU: India’s Gen Z workforce is embracing what experts describe as “portfolio careers” – balancing multiple professional identities and income streams simultaneously. New research from LinkedIn shows that 75% of Gen Z entrepreneurs in India now manage multiple income streams, significantly higher than the 62% among Gen X entrepreneurs. The findings point to a growing preference among younger professionals for flexibility, autonomy and diversified sources of income. “We’re also seeing the rise of the ‘portfolio era’, with more professionals creating multiple income streams and redefining what a career can look like. This shift is making entrepreneurship more accessible than ever before,” said LinkedIn India country manager Kumaresh Pattabiraman.Rather than depending on a single full-time role, many professionals are simultaneously building businesses, freelancing, consulting, creating online content and monetising specialised skills through digital platforms. The trend comes amid a broader rise in entrepreneurial activity in India. LinkedIn recorded a 104% year-on-year increase in members adding “Founder” to their profiles – the highest growth among all global markets.AI is also emerging as a major enabler of this shift. The report found that 85% of Gen Z entrepreneurs consider AI and digital tools important to their business operations.
Business
Elon Musk said control of OpenAI should go to his children, Sam Altman tells jury
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