Context
- Inflation Data:
- CPI (Consumer Price Index) inflation: 2.07% in August 2025.
- WPI (Wholesale Price Index) inflation: 0.52% in August 2025 compared to August 2024.
- Nominal vs Real GDP:
- Real GDP: Adjusted for inflation; measures physical growth of goods/services.
- Nominal GDP: Unadjusted for inflation; reflects monetary value of all goods/services and is critical for government’s fiscal calculations (tax revenue, deficit, debt).
- Budget Assumptions:
- 2025-26 Union Budget assumed nominal GDP growth of 11% (₹357 lakh crore) from revised ₹321 lakh crore in 2024-25.
- Fiscal deficit target: 4.4% of nominal GDP; Debt-to-GDP: 56.1%.
Relevance:
- GS3 (Economy / Fiscal Policy): Nominal vs real GDP, budget assumptions, inflation impact on tax revenue and deficit.
- GS3 (Monetary Policy): RBI’s role, price stability, corporate profitability, demand-supply dynamics.
Overview
Low Inflation: Implications
- Positive for consumers:
- Prices of goods and services are rising slowly → higher purchasing power.
- Reduces cost-of-living pressures for households.
- Challenges for government:
- Slower nominal GDP growth → lower than expected tax revenue.
- Makes fiscal targets (deficit, debt ratio) harder to achieve without additional revenue or expenditure cuts.
Nominal GDP Growth and Budget Arithmetic
- Current Trends:
- Real GDP growth Q1 FY26: 7.8% (5-quarter high).
- Nominal GDP growth Q1 FY26: 8.8% (3-quarter low) → below 11% Budget assumption.
- Significance:
- Government projections for tax revenue are tied to nominal GDP growth.
- Weak price growth reduces the monetary value of output, affecting revenue calculations.
- Even with strong real growth, low inflation can depress nominal GDP.
Historical Perspective & Base Effect
- Nominal GDP regularly misses Budget targets:
- Last 13 years: only 4 years matched Budget assumptions.
- Economic forecasting is inherently uncertain.
- Base effect in FY25:
- GDP revised from ₹321 lakh crore → ₹331 lakh crore.
- Required nominal growth for FY26 to meet Budget: ~8% (lower than initial 11%).
- Highlights dependency of fiscal arithmetic on nominal GDP benchmarks.

Causes of Low Inflation
- Oversupply / Weak demand:
- Ideal scenario → low inflation is benign.
- Corporate profitability:
- April-June 2025: sales rose ~5.3-5.5%, net profits increased 17-27%.
- Indicates profits rising faster than sales → not due to productivity gains.
- Other factors:
- Global commodity price moderation.
- Weak investment (capex) → less demand pressure in economy.
Consequences for Fiscal Policy
- Short-term impacts:
- Slower nominal growth → tax revenue below projections.
- Pressure on government to maintain deficit and debt targets.
- Medium-term considerations:
- If low inflation persists, may limit government’s capacity for new spending or stimulus.
- RBI may maintain accommodative monetary policy to support nominal GDP growth.
Broader Economic Implications
- Policy tension:
- Low inflation benefits consumers but can constrain fiscal space.
- Balancing growth stimulus vs fiscal discipline becomes challenging.
- Market signals:
- Strong corporate profits with weak sales growth → uneven economic expansion.
- Potential signs of demand-side weakness despite supply-side stability.