Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Linkedin
  • WhatsApp
  • Associate Journalism
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • 033-46046046
  • editor@artifex.news
Artifex.News

Artifex.News

Stay Connected. Stay Informed.

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • Nation
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Toggle search form
  • Artemis II, the international space race, and what is at stake for the U.S.
    Artemis II, the international space race, and what is at stake for the U.S. Science
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Liverpool Face Manchester United Title Test As Top Four Battle Heats Up
    Liverpool Face Manchester United Title Test As Top Four Battle Heats Up Sports
  • MS Dhoni Unveils ‘Samurai’ Hairstyle Ahead Of SRH Clash. Internet Explodes
    MS Dhoni Unveils ‘Samurai’ Hairstyle Ahead Of SRH Clash. Internet Explodes Sports
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Melania Trump’s Deal With Donald Trump If He Becomes President
    Melania Trump’s Deal With Donald Trump If He Becomes President World
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Mohun Bagan vs Mumbai City Live Streaming Indian Super League Final Live Telecast: Where To Watch ISL Final
    Mohun Bagan vs Mumbai City Live Streaming Indian Super League Final Live Telecast: Where To Watch ISL Final Sports
On global tensions and India’s economy

On global tensions and India’s economy

Posted on March 31, 2026 By admin


Rising geopolitical instability in West Asia is forcing a reassessment of how India’s macroeconomic strength is measured.

As of March 2026, this instability has translated into active macroeconomic stress. The rupee has depreciated to a record low of ₹95 per dollar, the Indian basket of crude oil hit $156.29 per barrel, and the Reserve Bank of India has deployed billions of dollars of foreign exchange reserves to contain volatility. In such conditions, strong quarterly GDP prints capture domestic activity but often overlook vulnerabilities linked to energy imports, shipping routes and fiscal buffers.

Against this backdrop, India enters the post-Budget season with a striking macroeconomic contradiction. Headline indicators remain robust: the State Bank of India expects Q3 FY26 GDP growth of about 8.1 percent, public capital expenditure is near 4 percent of GDP, and fiscal consolidation toward a 4.3 percent deficit by FY27 remains intact. At the same time, external buffers are weakening. Foreign exchange reserves have declined from recent highs to about $709.76 billion, while foreign portfolio outflows of over $8 billion following the onset of the conflict have intensified currency pressures.

Yet income dynamics are weaker. Real wages remain subdued, household liabilities have risen to roughly 41 percent of GDP, and private investment continues to lag the state’s capex-led expansion.

This divergence reflects a deeper shift in India’s fiscal architecture: revenue buoyancy is increasingly driven by transaction-linked taxation while expenditure tilts toward capital formation. In a stable global environment this model can sustain growth, but when energy markets become volatile, its durability depends on whether fiscal revenues, consumption and investment can withstand external commodity shocks.

Shifts in revenue structure

India’s revenue structure has been shifting in ways that matter more in a volatile global environment. Revenue receipts have risen from 8.5 percent of GDP in FY16–20 to about 9.1 percent in FY22–FY25 (PA), but the increase reflects recomposition rather than a broadening of income taxation. The Union Budget 2026–27 estimates gross tax revenue at ₹44.04 lakh crore, yet much of the buoyancy now comes from transaction-linked channels. GST collections reached ₹22.8 lakh crore in FY25, while levies on financial and cross-border transactions have also expanded.

Direct taxes typically expand when more workers move into stable paid employment. As a result, revenue growth increasingly depends on the volume of economic transactions rather than income deepening.

External shocks particularly energy price spikes that raise transport costs and compress household spending can quickly slow transactions. In such conditions, a fiscal model reliant on activity-linked taxation becomes more sensitive to geopolitical disruptions that ripple through consumption, trade and financial markets.

This vulnerability has been evident during past shocks. During the pandemic, widening gaps between projected and actual GST revenues forced the Union government to borrow over ₹2.69 lakh crore between 2020 and 2022 to compensate states for revenue shortfalls.

The effects of oil price surge

India’s fiscal system remains structurally exposed to oil price volatility. The country imports around 85–87 percent of its crude oil, making it directly vulnerable to external energy shocks a direct macroeconomic transmission channel.

Empirical estimates suggest that a $10 per barrel rise in crude prices can increase Consumer Price Index inflation by roughly 0.2 percentage points, widen the current account deficit by about $9–10 billion (around 0.4 percent of GDP) and reduce GDP growth by nearly 0.5 percentage points under partial pass-through conditions. Oil shocks also propagate through the fiscal system: higher energy costs raise fertiliser and LPG subsidy requirements, increase transport and logistics costs, and elevate inflation-linked expenditure.

Recent policy responses illustrate this transmission. Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Indian crude basket surged from roughly $59 per barrel in 2019 to over $120 in mid-2022.

To contain inflation, the government reduced central excise duties on petrol and diesel by a cumulative ₹13 and ₹16 per litre between November 2021 and May 2022, resulting in an estimated ₹2.2 lakh crore revenue loss. At the same time, energy-linked subsidies expanded, with fertiliser support rising sharply and total energy subsidies touching nearly ₹3.2 lakh crore.

Amid the ongoing conflict in West Asia, estimates by ICRA suggest that if oil prices average around $100 per barrel, India’s current account deficit could widen from about 0.7-0.8 percent to nearly 1 percent of GDP, while government expenditure could rise by as much as ₹3.6 trillion due to higher subsidy and compensation requirements. This underscores how energy shocks translate simultaneously into external imbalances and fiscal stress.

When oil prices spike, governments typically absorb part of the shock through tax reductions and subsidy expansion, compressing fiscal space. In a system increasingly reliant on transaction-linked taxes, such shocks can simultaneously weaken consumption, reduce GST buoyancy and expand expenditure pressures, creating a direct fiscal squeeze.

Impact on households

Household balance sheets reveal a key channel through which energy volatility transmits into the domestic economy.

Private consumption accounts for roughly 61.4 percent of India’s GDP, yet household liabilities have risen sharply from about 36–37 percent of GDP in 2022 to over 41 percent by 2025, increasing sensitivity to inflationary shocks and suggesting that consumption is being sustained less by income growth and more through credit expansion.

Net financial savings have also become more volatile, falling to around 3–4 percent of GDP in recent quarters before recovering to about 7.6 percent, indicating a weakening of financial buffers.

The exposure is being amplified by the current shock, as disruptions to LPG supply chains — over 60 percent of which depend on imports — have translated into longer refill cycles and local shortages, raising household energy costs even as leverage remains elevated.

At the same time, India’s expenditure strategy has pivoted toward infrastructure-led growth. The Union Budget 2026–27 places effective capital expenditure at ₹17.15 lakh crore.

While such front-loaded investment strengthens long-term productive capacity, it compresses fiscal space for welfare stabilisers. Allocations for the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act fell to ₹60,000 crore in 2023–24, 33 percent below the previous year’s revised estimate; by December 2022, States had already spent 117 percent of available funds, with ₹8,449 crore in pending liabilities.

In a low-wage environment, imported energy inflation compresses real incomes while debt servicing obligations remain fixed. Rising household leverage therefore becomes a macroeconomic vulnerability, especially when fiscal policy prioritises capital formation over income support and external shocks weaken consumption. Beyond households, geopolitical uncertainty is also shaping corporate investment and credit allocation.

Implications for industrial sector

India’s industrial upswing is increasingly concentrated in capital-intensive sectors aligned with public investment. Industrial output rose 7.8 percent in December 2025, with manufacturing expanding 8.1 percent year-on-year and 4.8 percent over April–December. High- and medium-technology industries now account for about 46 percent of manufacturing value added, according to the Economic Survey 2025-26.

By contrast, labour-intensive industries remain weak.

Private investment remains cautious despite rising project announcements.

CMIE (Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy) data shows private firms account for nearly 80 percent of new project announcements, yet only about 9 percent reached completion in 2022–23, suggesting a recovery that expands production capacity more than wage-linked income. Recent financial stability assessments show bank balance sheets are considerably stronger than a decade ago.

In a volatile global environment, this financial strength has translated into greater risk selectivity rather than broader credit expansion. 

The recent LPG crisis induced shortages of commercial cylinders have forced the closure of restaurants, cloud kitchens and small food businesses, with gig worker unions reporting a 50–60 percent decline in food delivery orders. Such shocks disproportionately affect labour-intensive and informal sectors, where incomes are directly tied to daily demand and lack institutional protection, even as capital-intensive sectors remain relatively insulated within the financial system.

As external pressures intensify, they raise a broader question of fiscal optionality: the state’s ability to absorb shocks without abandoning consolidation targets. With fiscal space tied to capital expenditure and revenues dependent on economic transactions, geopolitical disruptions can quickly narrow the room for counter-cyclical intervention. In such a context, India must rebalance toward income-led demand, more resilient revenue bases and greater energy diversification, or risk turning external shocks into a recurring source of fiscal stress.

(Deepanshu Mohan is professor and dean, O.P. Jindal Global University. He is a visiting professor at LSE and a visiting academic fellow at University of Oxford. Saksham Raj and Aditi Lazarus contributed to this column.)



Source link

World Tags:crude oil, economy, household expenditure, West Asia

Post navigation

Previous Post: Access Denied
Next Post: Access Denied

Related Posts

  • Access Denied World
  • Syrian inquiry finds most allegations of kidnapped Alawite women false
    Syrian inquiry finds most allegations of kidnapped Alawite women false World
  • Donald Trump On Chances Of War With Iran
    Donald Trump On Chances Of War With Iran World
  • Pakistan shopkeepers strike nationwide over inflation
    Pakistan shopkeepers strike nationwide over inflation World
  • How Safe Are India’s Nuclear Reactors? What Global Watchdog Chief Replied
    How Safe Are India’s Nuclear Reactors? What Global Watchdog Chief Replied World
  • Lower house of Russian Parliament votes to revoke ratification of global nuclear test ban
    Lower house of Russian Parliament votes to revoke ratification of global nuclear test ban World

More Related Articles

Top China Military Official Zhang Youxia Top China Military Official Zhang Youxia World
Access Denied World
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari To Forgo Salary Amid Economic Crisis Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari To Forgo Salary Amid Economic Crisis World
US Claims Hamas’ Number 3 Commander Marwan Issa Killed In Israeli Operation US Claims Hamas’ Number 3 Commander Marwan Issa Killed In Israeli Operation World
Access Denied World
Access Denied World
SiteLock

Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022

Categories

  • Business
  • Nation
  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Iran-Israel war LIVE: Iran hunts crew member of crashed U.S. jet after one reported rescued
  • Multiple security agencies target Kashmir employees to create an atmosphere of fear: Mirwaiz
  • Jan Vishwas Bill: Commerce Ministry wants departments to consider withdrawing cases involving minor offences
  • Access Denied
  • Congress MLA disqualified from Assembly hours after sentence; Congress slams ‘hasty’ move

Recent Comments

  1. Robertrap on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  2. Robertrap on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  3. Robertrap on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  4. AnthonyMaype on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  5. AnthonyNek on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  • TCS Q1 results: Net profit rises 8.7% to ₹12,040 crore; CEO says strong start to new fiscal
    TCS Q1 results: Net profit rises 8.7% to ₹12,040 crore; CEO says strong start to new fiscal Business
  • Access Denied
    Access Denied Nation
  • Another Hindu man killed in Bangladesh
    Another Hindu man killed in Bangladesh World
  • India vs Australia Live Streaming Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 Live Telecast: When And Where To Watch
    India vs Australia Live Streaming Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 Live Telecast: When And Where To Watch Sports
  • Arunachal Chief Minister On Dam Project
    Arunachal Chief Minister On Dam Project World
  • “Cricketers Shouldn’t Be…”: Pakistan Actor Says She Got ‘Messages’ From Stars, Sparks Speculation
    “Cricketers Shouldn’t Be…”: Pakistan Actor Says She Got ‘Messages’ From Stars, Sparks Speculation Sports
  • James Anderson’s Farewell Match: England vs West Indies 1st Test Day 1 Live Updates
    James Anderson’s Farewell Match: England vs West Indies 1st Test Day 1 Live Updates Sports
  • Access Denied Sports

Editor-in-Chief:
Mohammad Ariff,
MSW, MAJMC, BSW, DTL, CTS, CNM, CCR, CAL, RSL, ASOC.
editor@artifex.news

Associate Editors:
1. Zenellis R. Tuba,
zenelis@artifex.news
2. Haris Daniyel
daniyel@artifex.news

Photograher:
Rohan Das
rohan@artifex.news

Artifex.News offers Online Paid Internships to college students from India and Abroad. Interns will get a PRESS CARD and other online offers.
Send your CV (Subjectline: Paid Internship) to internship@artifex.news

Links:
Associate Journalism
About Us
Privacy Policy

News Links:
Breaking News
World
Nation
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Lifestyle

Registered Office:
72/A, Elliot Road, Kolkata - 700016
Tel: 033-22277777, 033-22172217
Email: office@artifex.news

Editorial Office / News Desk:
No. 13, Mezzanine Floor, Esplanade Metro Rail Station,
12 J. L. Nehru Road, Kolkata - 700069.
(Entry from Gate No. 5)
Tel: 033-46011099, 033-46046046
Email: editor@artifex.news

Copyright © 2023 Artifex.News Newsportal designed by Artifex Infotech.