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The Annual Plan Coordination Committee (APCC) projected Pakistan’s economy to grow by 4.2pc in 2025-26, signalling expectations of a broad-based recovery against 2.7pc GDP growth during the ...
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Rural consumption is poised to remain a bright spot in the Indian economy, supporting growth in the ongoing fiscal year, economists said after fourth-quarter GDP growth beat ...
Experts attribute India's robust GDP growth in FY25 to strong domestic consumption, government investment, and low export dependence.
The NSO, in its second advance estimate released in February, had projected the GDP growth for 2024-25 at 6.5 per cent. "Real GDP or GDP at Constant Prices is estimated to attain a level of Rs 187 ...
India's GDP growth slowed to a four-year low of 6.5% in FY25, down from 9.2% the previous year, as consumption and manufacturing weakened. Q4 GDP grew 7.4%, aided by construction and net exports.
India GDP growth Q4 FY25 Live updates: India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the January to March 2024-25 quarter grew at a better-than-expected 7.4%, higher than the previous three quarters.
India’s Q4 GDP growth beats estimates at 7.4%; full year 2024-25 estimate at 6.5% - check top points
India's economy exceeded expectations with a 7.4% growth in the fourth quarter of FY 2024-25. However, the full fiscal year GDP growth is provisionally estimated at 6.5%, marking a four-year low ...
India's GDP growth in 2024-25 slowest since 2020-21 pandemic year, but agriculture and construction sectors show strong performance. Real GDP growth in Q4 of 2024-25 accelerated to 7.4%, ...
Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) Anantha Nageswaran. The GDP growth was accelerated to a four-quarter high of 7.4 percent in the last quarter of FY25, with full-year growth ending at 6.5 percent.
India’s Q4 GDP growth has come in at a 4-quarter high of 7.4 per cent. This growth beats expectations and outpaces the previous quarter-on-quarter rate of 6.4 per cent. In FY25, the Indian ...
India's GDP growth slows to 6.5% in FY25: The annual figure, which was slightly above market expectations of 6.3 percent, was helped by a stronger January-March quarter that topped projections.
Some economists expect GDP growth to print significantly above expectations due to a fall in government subsidies. But they caution that true economic growth, as measured by gross value added (GVA ...
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