“India remains the world’s fastest-growing major economy — but the Iran war has taken a real bite out of its growth trajectory.” — On OECD and Goldman Sachs GDP forecast revisions, March 2026
Within days of each other in late March 2026, two of the world’s most closely watched economic forecasters revised their India growth projections downward — and both pointed to the same cause. The OECD projected India’s GDP growth at 6.1% for FY2026–27 (down from earlier estimates), while Goldman Sachs cut its 2026 forecast from 7% to 5.9%. Both cited the energy price shock from the Iran war, the Strait of Hormuz disruption, and their cascading effects on India’s import costs, inflation, and fiscal position. Crucially, both affirmed that India remains the world’s fastest-growing major economy — even at 6.1% or 5.9%. China’s 2026 growth is projected at ~4.5%; the US and Eurozone face sharper slowdowns. India’s relative position is intact; only the absolute pace has moderated.
📌 OECD’s Assessment: 6.1% for FY2026–27
The OECD’s interim Economic Outlook explicitly linked India’s downward revision to the Middle East conflict: the halt in Hormuz shipments and damage to energy infrastructure generated a surge in energy prices and disrupted global supply of energy and fertilisers.
The OECD’s three-year India projection:
- FY2025–26: 7.6% — largely unchanged, reflecting strong performance in the year now nearly complete
- FY2026–27: 6.1% — the year beginning April 2026, which will bear the full weight of the oil shock
- FY2027–28: 6.4% — partial recovery, assuming energy markets stabilise
The OECD also issued a specific monetary policy signal: India’s central bank (RBI) is projected to raise policy rates temporarily in Q2 2026. This reflects the classic supply-side inflation dilemma — cost-push price increases from oil cannot be resolved by rate hikes, but the RBI may feel compelled to act as a credibility signal to anchor inflation expectations.
Critically, the OECD’s projections assumed energy disruption is temporary, with prices easing from mid-2026. If that assumption fails — if the Iran war persists and Hormuz remains disrupted — the OECD warned that outcomes could be “significantly worse.”
Three numbers and one status — all high-frequency in MCQs:
Trap 1: India is NOT an OECD member. India is a Key Partner (also called Enhanced Engagement country). The OECD has 38 member countries — India is not one of them. This appears frequently in objective questions.
Trap 2: 6.1% = FY2026–27 (future year, Iran war impact). 7.6% = FY2025–26 (current year, nearly over). Do not swap these — they refer to different financial years.
Trap 3: Goldman Sachs = 5.9% (cut from 7%). OECD = 6.1%. These are different institutions with different numbers — never attribute one institution’s figure to the other in a MCQ answer.
✨ Goldman Sachs: Cut to 5.9%
Goldman Sachs’s revision was more aggressive — cutting its India 2026 forecast from 7% to 5.9%. The firm’s reasoning aligned with the OECD’s energy shock assessment but added emphasis on the fiscal dimension: the government’s excise duty cut and OMC support commitments represent a significant drain on public finances, constraining the government’s ability to maintain the record capital expenditure (capex) levels that have been a primary driver of India’s growth momentum.
Goldman also highlighted the current account deficit (CAD) risk: with crude at $100–$122/barrel, ICRA estimated India’s CAD could widen to 1.9–2.2% of GDP — creating currency pressure on the rupee that compounds the growth slowdown through higher import costs for non-energy goods and services.
Think of India’s economy as a car travelling at 100 kmph (the ~7% growth of FY2025–26). The Iran war is like driving into a headwind — the engine (domestic consumption, investment, digital economy) is working just as hard, but the car slows to 80–85 kmph (6.1–5.9%). Every other car on the road has also slowed — some to 60 kmph (China), some to 30 kmph (Europe). India is still leading the race. The question is whether the headwind is temporary (Hormuz reopens, oil falls) or structural (prolonged war, sustained high crude).
🌍 Why India Is Still the Fastest-Growing Major Economy
Even at 6.1% or 5.9%, India’s growth would comfortably exceed every other major economy in 2026–27. The comparative picture:
- India: 6.1% (OECD) / 5.9% (Goldman Sachs)
- China: ~4.5% — slowing structural transition, property sector stress, demand weakness
- United States: ~1.8–2.0% — high interest rates, post-stimulus cooling
- Eurozone: ~1.2–1.5% — direct energy shock exposure, industrial weakness
India’s structural drivers — domestic consumption (the world’s largest middle-class expansion), record infrastructure investment, digital economy growth, and the demographic dividend (median age ~28 years) — remain intact. The Iran war has hit India harder than most, given its ~85–90% crude import dependence. But it has hit Europe and China too, and they started from lower growth bases. India’s relative position as the fastest-growing major economy is unchanged.
| Economy | 2026 Growth Forecast | Primary Drag Factor |
|---|---|---|
| India | 6.1% (OECD) / 5.9% (GS) | Oil price shock, CAD widening, fiscal pressure |
| China | ~4.5% | Property sector, structural deceleration, demand weakness |
| United States | ~1.8–2.0% | High rates, post-stimulus normalisation |
| Eurozone | ~1.2–1.5% | Direct energy shock, industrial weakness |
📜 Fiscal Context: Record Borrowing and Infrastructure
The government’s response to the Iran war’s fiscal pressure has been to maintain capital expenditure ambitions while absorbing oil shock costs. Key fiscal parameters for FY2026–27:
- Infrastructure spending: ₹12.2 trillion — a record level, reflecting the government’s commitment to capex-led growth even under fiscal stress
- Government borrowing: ₹17.2 trillion — the largest in India’s history, reflecting both the oil shock’s fiscal cost and the political commitment to sustain public investment
The critical question Goldman Sachs raised: can ₹17.2 trillion in government borrowing be absorbed by India’s debt markets without crowding out private investment? If the government borrows heavily, interest rates in the bond market rise, making private sector borrowing more expensive — potentially undermining the private capex recovery that India needs to sustain 7%+ growth over the medium term.
⚖️ About the OECD: India’s Relationship
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is an intergovernmental economic organisation founded in 1961, headquartered in Paris, France. It has 38 member countries — primarily advanced economies (US, UK, Germany, France, Japan, South Korea, Australia, etc.).
India is not an OECD member. India holds the status of a Key Partner (also referred to as an Enhanced Engagement country) — a designation that allows India to participate in many OECD forums, data-sharing arrangements, and policy dialogues without full membership. India has been in active accession discussions with the OECD for several years, but formal membership has not been concluded as of 2026.
The OECD publishes two major economic outlook reports annually — the full Economic Outlook (usually in May and November) and interim updates (usually in March and September). The March 2026 interim update is the source of the India projections discussed in this article.
The OECD projected India’s RBI will raise rates in Q2 2026 — but rate hikes cannot address oil-driven cost-push inflation. They can only suppress demand-side price pressures. If the RBI raises rates to signal credibility while crude stays at $120+, the result could be: higher borrowing costs for businesses + sustained oil inflation + fiscal tightening from excise cuts = a sharper-than-expected growth slowdown. Is monetary policy the right tool for a supply-side inflation shock — and what are India’s alternatives?
Institution → Number Map: OECD → 6.1% (FY2026–27) and 7.6% (FY2025–26). Goldman Sachs → 5.9% (cut from 7%). ICRA → CAD 1.9–2.2% of GDP at $100 crude. Emkay → ₹1.55 trillion annual revenue loss from SAED cut. Each institution has its own number — never cross-attribute in MCQs.
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The OECD projected India’s GDP growth at 6.1% for FY2026–27 — the year beginning April 2026 that will bear the full weight of the Iran war’s economic impact. 7.6% is the FY2025–26 projection (current year, largely complete). 5.9% is Goldman Sachs’s figure, not the OECD’s.
Goldman Sachs cut its India 2026 forecast from 7% to 5.9% — a more aggressive revision than the OECD’s 6.1%. Goldman cited oil prices, fiscal pressure from OMC support commitments, and current account deficit widening as primary factors.
India is NOT an OECD member. India holds Key Partner (Enhanced Engagement) status — it participates in OECD forums, data sharing, and policy dialogues but is not one of the 38 full member countries. This is a common exam trap.
The OECD projected that India’s RBI would raise policy rates temporarily in Q2 2026 — responding to cost-push inflation from oil prices. This is a credibility-signal response: rate hikes cannot resolve supply-side oil inflation, but the RBI may raise rates to anchor expectations.
Even at 6.1% (OECD) or 5.9% (Goldman Sachs), India’s growth comfortably exceeds China (~4.5%), the US (~1.8–2.0%), and the Eurozone (~1.2–1.5%). India remains the world’s fastest-growing major economy despite the Iran war slowdown — its relative position is unchanged.