India’s GDP Growth Forecast For 2026 Slashed To 6 Per Cent By Moody’s, No Thanks To Middle East Crisis

India’s GDP Growth Forecast For 2026 Slashed To 6 Per Cent By Moody’s, No Thanks To Middle East Crisis



New Delhi: India’s GDP growth forecast for 2026 has been slashed by 0.8 percentage points to 6 per cent by Moody’s Ratings.

This is due to subdued private consumption, capital formation, and industrial activity amid higher energy costs, the rating agency said on Tuesday.

Over the next six months, the impact from higher energy prices and fuel and fertilizer-related shortages will vary widely across countries, reflecting differences in exposure and resilience, Moody’s has said in its Global Macro Outlook May update.
“The global outlook remains highly uncertain amid an increasingly prolonged confrontation and fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran, We estimate growth losses ranging from around 0.8 ppt for India,” it said.

Moody’s also slashed GDP growth estimates by 0.5 percentage points to 6 per cent for India for the calendar year 2027, reflecting lingering headwinds that gradually fade as shipping flows stabilise and energy supplies improve, allowing underlying economic activity to recover.

India is “particularly vulnerable” to high oil prices given its heavy reliance on imported crude and LNG, the agency has said. India imports about 90 per cent of its energy requirements.

While agricultural exports will benefit in the near term from higher prices, higher fuel and fertilizer costs would weigh on government finances, potentially constraining planned capital spending, Moody’s said, as reported by Deccan Herald.

Coal powers about 70 per cent of

India’s electricity generation, while non-fossil sources (solar, wind, hydro) continue to expand.

“Our central scenario projection of 6 per cent growth in both 2026 and 2027, following 7.5 per cent growth in 2025, reflects more subdued private consumption, capital formation, and industrial activity amid tighter financial conditions and higher energy costs,” Moody’s said.

Persistently high energy costs would keep inflation elevated, compress profits, weaken investment and strain public finances, while major central banks remain on hold but ready to tighten financial conditions if necessary, it added.

Drawn-out negotiations between US and Iran, ongoing shipping blockades and the risk of military escalation threaten the truce’s durability, the US-based rating agency said.

Against this unstable backdrop, the global economy faces another potential energy and food-price shock, particularly if transit flows to and from the Gulf remain constrained, Moody’s said, adding the magnitude of growth and inflation effects hinges on the duration of the Strait of Hormuz’s closure.

Nearly 60 per cent of India’s LPG consumption is imported and of that, 90 per cent flows through the now-closed Strait of Hormuz. Several Asian economies are actively diversifying their supplier mix by expanding oil imports from existing partners and exploring new sources.

India is also importing more Russian crude, while Japan and Korea are shifting incrementally toward US barrels, Moody’s said.

Economies face a mix of shared and idiosyncratic challenges from the fallout, the agency added. Strategic reserves offer only short-term protection as physical global energy shortages will become increasingly binding within months. Asia-Pacific is the most exposed region.

“China is partly insulated by its reliance on coal and renewables, while India remains vulnerable,” Moody’s said.


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