Quarter after quarter, year after year, India is fastest growing economy: FM Sitharaman

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said India remains the world's fastest-growing major economy and accused Congress leader Rahul Gandhi of undermining the country's achievements by repeatedly predicting crises that have not materialised.

Nirmala Sitharaman: 'There is no disaster awaiting India,' FM lashes out at Rahul Gandhi
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday said India continues to remain the world's fastest-growing major economy, while addressing the BJP's Viksit Bharat event in Bengaluru.

The finance minister slammed Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, accusing him of "undermining" the achievements of India and its people while targeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Centre.She alleged that Rahul Gandhi "ignores" India's achievements even in the face of major crises like COVID and the conflict in West Asia. Sitharaman clarified that there is no crisis awaiting in the country as is being portrayed by Rahul Gandhi.

"Every time the Leader of Opposition speaks in the Lok Sabha, it is only to decry everything, undermine the achievements of the people of India, thinking that he is undermining Prime Minister Modi or the central government," she said in her address to the party functionaries at the Viksit Bharat Sankalp Samavesha here to celebrate 12 years of the BJP rule in the country under the leadership of PM Narendra Modi.


According to her, Rahul Gandhi constantly says that everything is going to crumble in the next few weeks. The LoP keeps saying that there is a big disaster awaiting, but there is no disaster awaiting India.

Meanwhile, India’s economy expanded 7.7% in fiscal year 2025-26, up from 7.1% a year earlier. Growth in the January-March quarter stood at 7.8%, compared with 8% in the preceding quarter. The fourth-quarter figure exceeded the median estimate of 7.3% in a Bloomberg survey of economists and matched the pace recorded in the previous quarter.

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Middle East conflict casts shadow over outlook

Economists and policymakers are increasingly reassessing India’s growth outlook amid rising geopolitical risks and mounting pressure from higher energy prices.

Higher US tariffs, geopolitical tensions linked to the Iran conflict and rising energy prices have emerged as major risks to growth. India remains particularly exposed because of its reliance on imported crude oil and trade flows passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Concerns over inflation, tighter financial conditions and possible weather-related disruptions are also weighing on the outlook for both urban and rural demand.

Before tensions in the Middle East intensified, Chief Economic Adviser V Anantha Nageswaran had projected growth of between 7% and 7.4% in the current financial year. That outlook has become less certain as the Iran conflict enters its fourth month without any clear diplomatic breakthrough between Washington and Tehran.
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After the GDP data was released, Nageswaran said India could return to growth above 7% by FY28 if macroeconomic stability is maintained and supply-side measures continue, even as global uncertainties weigh on the near-term outlook.

His comments came hours after the Reserve Bank of India lowered its FY27 growth forecast to 6.6% from 6.9% projected in April, citing higher energy and commodity prices as well as continuing supply disruptions linked to the conflict in West Asia.
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