India Defies Trump’s ‘Dead Economy’ Taunt with Blistering 7.8 GDP Growth
New Delhi: Just days after the 25% additional tariff by the United States came into effect, India’s GDP data from the April-June quarter has become the talking point. According to official data shared by the National Statistics Office (NSO), India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 7.8% in Q1 of FY26 (April–June 2025), marking a five-quarter high. What makes this figure even more noteworthy is the fact that very recently, US President Donald Trump had made a “dead economy” jibe at India; however, the numbers say otherwise.
The GDP data beat the estimates, showing India’s economy is a resilient one and cannot be discounted. At current prices, nominal GDP expanded by 8.8 per cent, reaching Rs 86.05 lakh crore compared to Rs 79.08 lakh crore in Q1 FY25. Real GDP, adjusted for inflation, stood at Rs 47.89 lakh crore.
What’s Driving 7.8% Growth Despite Tariff Headwinds
India’s economy surprised everyone by growing at 7.8% in the April-June quarter (Q1 FY26), the fastest pace in five quarters. The big question: what’s powering this growth, and can it withstand challenges like Trump’s new tariffs?
Manufacturing and Construction on the Rise
Growth wasn’t just about one sector — it was broad-based. The manufacturing sector grew 7.7%, while construction expanded 7.6%, thanks to strong demand for housing, infrastructure, and industrial goods.
Services Lead the Charge
The real star was the services sector, which jumped 9.3% compared to 6.8% last year. This reflects stronger consumer demand, rising travel, hospitality, and digital services — all signs of India’s post-pandemic resilience.
Agriculture Holding Steady
Even the farm sector improved, growing 3.7% versus 1.5% a year ago. While not spectacular, it shows steady support for rural incomes.
Weak Spots
Not all sectors shone: mining shrank by 3.1%, and utilities like electricity and water supply grew just 0.5%, pointing to areas of concern.
Spending and Investment Trends
Private consumption (PFCE) rose 7%, slightly slower than last year, while investments (GFCF) grew 7.8%, showing confidence in India’s growth story. Crucially, the government stepped up too, public spending jumped 9.7%, a big rebound from 4% growth last year.
Why Tariffs Won’t Break India
Donald Trump’s decision to double tariffs on Indian goods to 50% was meant to punish New Delhi for buying Russian energy. But here’s the catch — India isn’t an export-driven economy like China or Germany.
In fact, over 60% of India’s GDP comes from domestic demand, households, services, and infrastructure spending. That means tariffs, while painful for some industries like textiles and shrimp, won’t derail the whole economy.
Economists say Trump’s tariffs could trim 0.3–0.8% from India’s annual growth. But with the economy already running at 7.8%, India has enough cushion to absorb the blow and keep growing.
Why This Matters
India’s strong Q1 numbers are impressive not just in isolation, but because they come amid global turbulence — high US interest rates, inflation, and geopolitical conflicts in Europe and Asia. Yet, India is holding steady, powered by its domestic consumption, booming digital economy, and massive infrastructure push.
In short, while Trump’s tariffs may sting, they can’t stop the momentum of the world’s fastest-growing large economy.