India’s growth momentum accelerates as consumption, credit and rural demand surge – Firstpost


India’s economic engine roars back as rural demand, GST boom and cleaner banks signal strong growth

India’s economy is showing signs of entering a stronger and broader growth cycle, with a fresh set of high-frequency indicators pointing towards rising demand, healthier banks, and improving economic activity across both rural and urban India.

The latest numbers suggest that the momentum is not being driven by one sector alone. Instead, consumption, manufacturing, exports, tax collections and banking stability are beginning to reinforce each other simultaneously, a combination economists often see as the foundation of a durable growth phase.

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One of the clearest signals is coming from rural India.

Domestic tractor sales jumped 26.8 per cent year-on-year in April to 1,05,021 units, compared with 82,839 units in the same period last year. Tractor exports grew even faster, surging 30.4 per cent to 9,704 units. Overall tractor production rose 18.1 per cent year-on-year to 1,10,261 units, reflecting strong manufacturing activity and improving farm-linked demand.

Industry experts say tractor sales are among the most closely watched indicators of rural sentiment because they capture farmer confidence, agricultural cash flows and spending capacity. Strong passenger vehicle sales data during the same period further suggests that consumption demand is recovering beyond just premium urban segments.

The tax data is also painting a picture of a rapidly formalising economy.

India’s gross GST collections rose 8.7 per cent year-on-year in April to touch an all-time high of Rs 2.43 lakh crore, giving the government a strong start to the new financial year. Even after refunds, net GST revenue stood at Rs 2.11 lakh crore, up 7.3 per cent from a year earlier. Economists say sustained GST growth generally reflects stronger business transactions, rising consumption and improved compliance across the formal economy.

Meanwhile, India’s banking system, once considered one of the biggest vulnerabilities in the economy, is entering this cycle from a position of unusual strength.

According to the Reserve Bank of India’s latest Monetary Policy Report, the gross non-performing assets (NPA) ratio of scheduled commercial banks declined further to just 2 per cent in December 2025, compared with 2.5 per cent a year ago. The improvement was visible across sectors, including retail loans, industry, agriculture and services.

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Lower bad loans mean banks now have greater capacity to lend to businesses and consumers, improving the transmission of credit into the broader economy.

Taken together, the latest indicators suggest India’s growth story is increasingly becoming domestically driven, powered by rural recovery, resilient consumption, stronger tax collections and healthier financial institutions.

At a time when many major economies are grappling with slowing industrial activity and weak consumer demand, India’s latest economic signals are beginning to stand out more sharply on the global stage.

First Published:
May 25, 2026, 13:17 IST

End of Article

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