India-Russia ties: PM Modi tells Putin India not neutral
Digest more
NEW DELHI, Dec 6 (Reuters) - India’s economic growth will accelerate to at least 7% this year as fundamentals remain robust despite global uncertainties, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Saturday.
1hon MSN
Putin’s India visit: What does it mean for the Indian economy? Can it mitigate US tariff pain?
The recent India-Russia Annual Summit signals a potential shift. Experts highlight the significance of new trade agreements, but caution that while enhanced cooperation with Russia can provide some relief,
India's economy likely stayed resilient in the July–September quarter, driven by consumer demand and front-loading of production and exports ahead of U.S. tariffs, though growth is expected to moderate in the coming quarters.
India’s growth momentum is set to continue, and the government expects the economy to expand by at least 7% in the financial year through March, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said.
Finance minister Sitharaman emphasized a major reform of India's customs duty structure and projected a 7% economic growth this fiscal year. The minister talks about rupee, consumtion and more
September, accelerating from the 7.8% growth reported in the previous quarter, as strong consumer spending and manufacturing remained key drivers amid global trade uncertainties.
Vishrut Rana says India could be a $5.0 trillion economy by 2028. Here's why Rana believes Indian economic growth could beat IMF estimates.
India’s unexpectedly strong economic growth last quarter has reduced chances of an interest rate cut at this week’s central bank’s policy meeting despite record-low inflation.