PIB Summaries 28 February 2026

  • Redefining Growth: India’s Revised GDP Estimates and the New Measurement Framework
  • India’s Trade Partnerships Powering Global Integration and Growth


Release of Revised GDP Estimates
  • On 27 February 2026, Government released revised GDP estimates, shifting base year from 2011–12 to 2022–23, incorporating major methodological reforms and expanded administrative data integration.
  • Real GDP growth (FY 2025–26): 7.6%, compared to 7.1% in FY 2024–25, reflecting sustained macroeconomic resilience amid global slowdown and external uncertainties.
  • Nominal GDP growth projected at 8.6% (FY 2025–26), directly influencing fiscal deficit ratios, debt-to-GDP metrics, and macroeconomic sustainability indicators.
Back-Series and Continuity
  • Back-series data under revised methodology will be released by December 2026, ensuring historical comparability, continuity in long-term trend analysis, and transparency in national accounts.

Relevance

GS Paper III (Economy)

  • National income accounting; Base year revision (2011–12 → 2022–23).
  • Real vs Nominal GDP; GVA–GDP divergence.
  • Productivity measurement; Double deflation; SupplyUse Tables.
  • DebtGDP ratio, fiscal deficit recalibration under FRBM.

Practice Question

  • Periodic GDP rebasing is not merely statistical revision but a reflection of structural transformation.Examine in the context of Indias 2022–23 base year shift.(250 Words)
Meaning and Scope of GDP
  • GDP measures monetary value of final goods and services produced within domestic territory during a specified accounting period, excluding intermediate goods to prevent double counting.
  • Real GDP uses base-year prices to remove inflationary distortions, whereas Nominal GDP reflects current price changes alongside real output variations.
Institutional and Methodological Framework
  • India compiles GDP following SNA 2008 standards, under the National Statistical Office (NSO) within the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) framework.
  • GDP = GVA + Taxes Subsidies, explaining divergence between GDP and Gross Value Added (GVA) during periods of fluctuating indirect tax collections.
Structural Transformation of the Economy
  • Base year revision reflects structural transformation including digital economy expansion, renewable energy growth, GST stabilization, and rising economic formalisation through EPFO and tax digitisation.
  • 2022–23 selected as most recent post-pandemic normal year, avoiding distortions caused by COVID contraction (6.6% in FY 2020–21).
Need for Periodic Rebasing
  • Without periodic rebasing, outdated price structures distort real growth estimation, underrepresent emerging sectors, and miscalculate productivity improvements.
  • Historical base revisions approximately every decade ensure alignment with evolving economic structure and international statistical best practices.
Aggregate Growth Performance
  • Real GDP growth: 7.6%, indicating strengthening domestic demand, investment recovery, and industrial expansion supported by Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes.
  • Nominal GDP growth: 8.6%, impacting fiscal projections, tax buoyancy calculations, and debt sustainability metrics.
Sectoral Performance
  • Manufacturing recorded double-digit growth in FY 2023–24 and FY 2025–26, signalling revival in industrial output and capital formation.
  • Secondary and Tertiary sectors grew above 9%, indicating broad-based expansion beyond agriculture and reinforcing services-driven growth trajectory.
  • Trade, repair, hotels, transport, communication recorded 10.1% growth, reflecting revival in consumption-linked service sectors.
Benchmark–Indicator Framework
  • BenchmarkIndicator method uses annual GDP as reference and extrapolates quarterly estimates using high-frequency indicators, aligning with IMF’s Quarterly National Accounts Manual.
Double Deflation and Granular Pricing
  • Double deflation applied in manufacturing and agriculture, separately deflating output and intermediate inputs to improve real value-added estimation accuracy.
  • Over 260 item-level CPI indices used for granular deflation, reducing distortion from aggregate price indices and improving sector-specific real growth measurement.
Supply–Use Table Integration
  • Integration of Supply and Use Tables (SUT) eliminates statistical discrepancy through product balancing, ensuring consistency between production and expenditure approaches.
Use of GST and Surveys
  • GST data enables cross-validation of corporate output, state-wise allocation of activity, and improved quarterly estimation across manufacturing and non-financial services sectors.
  • ASUSE and PLFS provide direct level estimates for unincorporated enterprises and labour input validation, reducing reliance on outdated proxy extrapolations.
Real-Time Government and Consumption Data
  • Public Financial Management System (PFMS) improves real-time measurement of General Government expenditure, enhancing fiscal sector accuracy.
  • e-Vahan database strengthens estimation of Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE) in transport services using high-frequency vehicle registration data.
Informal Sector Strengthening
  • Inclusion of unincorporated enterprises enhances measurement of the informal sector, historically underrepresented due to limited data availability.
  • Hired domestic workers included under household employer activities, improving representation of service-sector labour within GDP.
Digital and Multi-Activity Corporations
  • Gig and platform economy contributions better captured using corporate filings and survey integration, reflecting structural digital transformation.
  • Multi-activity corporations segregated using MGT-7/7A filings, improving sectoral allocation accuracy instead of principal-activity assignment.
Strengthening GSDP Estimation
  • NSO guidelines ensure Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) estimates remain consistent with national accounting standards and uniform definitions.
  • Reduced reliance on allocation ratios enhances direct estimation of state-level output using administrative and survey-based data.
Fiscal and Institutional Impact
  • Accurate GSDP influences Finance Commission devolution, borrowing ceilings, fiscal deficit ratios, and intergovernmental fiscal transfers.
  • Statistical modernization strengthens macroeconomic credibility, influencing sovereign ratings, foreign investment flows, and multilateral institutional confidence.
Fiscal Metrics and Sustainability
  • Rebasing may alter Debt-to-GDP and Fiscal Deficit-to-GDP ratios, affecting consolidation targets under the FRBM framework.
  • Nominal GDP recalibration influences tax buoyancy ratios and medium-term fiscal projections in Union Budget planning.
Growth and Productivity Assessment
  • Improved measurement of manufacturing productivity enhances accuracy of potential growth and output gap calculations.
  • Administrative data integration improves evidence-based policymaking and strengthens counter-cyclical macroeconomic management.
Data and Coverage Issues
  • Informal sector estimation remains partially survey-based, limiting complete real-time measurement of micro and small enterprise activity.
  • GST threshold exemptions exclude smaller firms, potentially understating output in retail and service segments.
Broader Developmental Gaps
  • GDP excludes inequality, unpaid care work, and environmental degradation, limiting comprehensive welfare assessment.
  • Uneven capacity across state Directorates of Economics and Statistics (DES) affects uniform GSDP compilation.
Transparency and Standards
  • Publish detailed Sources and Methodsdocumentation to enhance transparency and strengthen trust in national accounts.
  • Transition to SNA 2025 standards by 2029–30 to maintain international comparability and methodological modernization.
Sustainability and Institutional Strengthening
  • Develop Green GDP and satellite environmental accounts to integrate sustainability into national income measurement.
  • Strengthen state statistical capacity through digital integration, training, and standardized real-time data reporting systems.


Trade Diplomacy Accelerates in 2026
  • In FY 2025–26, India concluded FTAs with the United Kingdom, Oman and New Zealand, finalised the landmark India–EU FTA, and launched negotiations with GCC and Israel.
  • According to UNCTAD Trade and Development Report 2025, India ranks 3rd among Global South economies in trade partnership diversity index, surpassing all Global North economies.
  • India concluded negotiations for the “Mother of All Deals” — the India–EU FTA in January 2026, marking one of its most strategic economic agreements.

Relevance

GS Paper II – International Relations

  • Trade diplomacy as economic statecraft.
  • IndiaEU, UK, GCC, Israel: strategic balancing in multipolar order.
  • Diversification reducing overdependence on single markets (China+1, Europe+1).

GS Paper III – Economy

  • FTAs and export-led growth strategy.
  • Global Value Chain (GVC) integration.
  • Labour-intensive exports revival.
  • Services trade liberalisation (Mode 1–4).
  • Investment-linked trade agreements (EFTA).

Practice Question

  • Evaluate the impact of India’s new-generation FTAs on manufacturing competitiveness, employment generation and integration into global value chains.(250 Words)
Expanding Global Trade Footprint
  • India has steadily increased its global trade share, supported by resilient services exports, diversified merchandise exports, and expanding participation in global value chains (GVCs).
  • Trade partnership diversification enhances resilience against tariff uncertainties, geopolitical fragmentation, and supply-chain disruptions in an increasingly multipolar global economy.
  • FTAs strengthen reliable market access, reduce non-tariff barriers, promote investment flows, and improve integration into global production networks.
Market Access and Tariff Liberalisation
  • EU provides preferential access across 97% of tariff lines, covering 99.5% of trade value, while allowing India policy flexibility for sensitive sectors.
  • 70.4% of tariff lines, covering 90.7% of Indias exports, receive immediate duty elimination, benefiting labour-intensive sectors like textiles, leather, gems, and marine products.
  • Zero duty over 3–5 years applies to 20.3% tariff lines, while 6.1% tariff lines receive preferential access through tariff-rate quotas and reductions.
Sectoral and Services Gains
  • Labour-intensive exports exceeding ₹2.87 lakh crore (USD 33 billion) gain competitiveness and deeper integration into European value chains.
  • EU extended commitments across 144 service subsectors, including IT/ITeS, education, professional and business services, supporting high-value service exports.
Goods and Trade Expansion
  • 99% of Indias exports receive duty-free access, covering nearly 100% of trade value, benefiting textiles, engineering goods, chemicals, and auto components.
  • Bilateral trade currently stands at USD 56 billion, with both countries targeting doubling trade by 2030 under CETA framework.
Mobility and Social Security
  • UK eased mobility for professionals in IT, healthcare, finance and education, facilitating smoother entry for contractual suppliers and intra-corporate transferees.
  • Double Contribution Convention eliminates dual social security payments, generating estimated savings of over ₹4,000 crore for Indian firms and professionals.
Market Access and Sectoral Gains
  • Oman grants zero-duty access on 98.08% tariff lines, covering 99.38% of Indias exports by value, boosting agriculture, textiles, engineering and pharmaceuticals.
  • Agreement enhances opportunities for MSMEs, artisans, women-led enterprises, and labour-intensive industries across manufacturing and agriculture.
Services and AYUSH Recognition
  • Oman extended commitments on traditional medicine across all modes of supply, marking first such recognition globally for India’s AYUSH sector.
  • Mode 4 commitments enable temporary entry for intra-corporate transferees, business visitors, and independent professionals.
Comprehensive Tariff Elimination
  • New Zealand eliminated duties on 100% of tariff lines, granting immediate zero-duty access for all Indian exports.
  • Agreement strengthens market access for farmers and MSMEs, supporting integration into Oceania and Pacific Island markets.
Investment and Workforce Cooperation
  • Backed by USD 20 billion investment commitment over 15 years, enhancing long-term economic and strategic cooperation.
  • Expands workforce mobility in sectors like IT, healthcare, engineering, AYUSH, education, construction and hospitality services.
Market Access and Investment Commitments
  • EFTA offered access on 92.2% tariff lines, covering 99.6% of exports, including 100% coverage of non-agricultural products.
  • Investment commitment of USD 100 billion over 15 years, expected to generate 1 million direct jobs, excluding foreign portfolio investments.
Services and Capacity Building
  • Strengthens cooperation in IT, education, business, cultural and audio-visual services, deepening India’s high-value services exports.
Trade Growth Impact
  • Bilateral trade surpassed USD 100 billion in FY 2024–25, achieving earlier five-year target ahead of schedule.
  • Non-oil exports reached USD 27.4 billion in FY 2023–24, growing at average 25.6% since CEPA implementation.
Sectoral Highlights
  • Smartphones exports to UAE reached USD 2.57 billion in FY 2023–24, alongside growth in chemicals, machinery, and high-technology goods.
  • CEPA empowered MSMEs, strengthened supply chains, and enhanced India’s strategic economic footprint in the MENA region.
Tariff Liberalisation and Services
  • Australia granted preferential access across 100% tariff lines, while India extended access on over 70% tariff lines, particularly raw materials.
  • Australia offered commitments across 135 service subsectors, granting MFN treatment in 120 subsectors.
Trade Gains
  • India’s exports to Australia grew by 8% in FY 2024–25, with strong gains in manufacturing, chemicals, textiles, and agricultural products.
  • Gems and jewellery exports rose 16% during April–November 2025, reflecting sustained sectoral momentum.
Digital and Financial Support
  • Trade Connect ePlatform provides tariff explorer services enabling exporters to leverage FTA benefits effectively.
  • Export Promotion Mission (EPM) establishes digitally driven framework for enhancing export initiatives and global outreach.
  • Credit Guarantee Scheme for Exporters ensures liquidity support during uncertainty, promoting business continuity and market expansion.
RBI and Regulatory Measures
  • RBI extended export credit tenor to 450 days until 31 March 2026, enhancing working capital flexibility.
  • Export realisation period extended from 9 months to 15 months under FEMA amendments.
  • Union Budget 2026–27 removed ₹10 lakh courier export cap and enabled direct factory-to-ship clearance using electronic sealing.
New and Ongoing Negotiations
  • India reached interim framework understanding with the United States for advancing a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).
  • First round of India–Israel FTA negotiations concluded in February 2026, focusing on fintech, AI, pharmaceuticals, defence, and space cooperation.
  • Negotiations underway with GCC, ASEAN, Mexico and Canada, targeting enhanced trade, investment flows, and supply-chain resilience.
Growth and Employment Effects
  • FTAs expand export markets, stimulate investment inflows, create employment across manufacturing and services sectors, and deepen integration into global value chains.
  • Diversified trade partnerships reduce vulnerability to concentrated markets and enhance resilience against geopolitical and tariff shocks.
Geopolitical and Strategic Dimensions
  • Expanding FTA network positions India as a central actor in evolving global trade architecture anchored in trust, reciprocity, and shared prosperity.
  • Trade diplomacy complements strategic partnerships across Indo-Pacific, Europe, MENA and Africa, reinforcing India’s economic statecraft.
Deepening Integration
  • Accelerate implementation of concluded FTAs to maximise utilisation rates and ensure MSMEs effectively leverage preferential market access.
  • Strengthen logistics infrastructure, customs digitalisation, and regulatory harmonisation to reduce trade costs and improve export competitiveness.
Long-Term Strategic Alignment
  • Align trade strategy with Make in India, PLI schemes, and supply-chain diversification goals.
  • Ensure balance between market access commitments and safeguarding sensitive agricultural and dairy sectors.

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