11don MSNOpinion
India's GDP data debate: Why current methods remain robust and what will change with the 2026 base revision
India’s GDP is measured using globally accepted SNA methods, and despite an outdated base year, key economic activity is ...
Monthly construction output is estimated to have fallen by 0.6% in October 2025; this follows an increase of 0.2% in September 2025. The decrease in monthly output in October 2025 came from decreases ...
While the GDP data issues are not new, what’s new is the rating system by the IMF—started last year—that has brought to ...
Monthly real GDP is estimated to have fallen by 0.1% in October 2025, following a fall in 0.1% in September 2025. Services and construction both fell in October 2025, by 0.3% and 0.6%, respectively, ...
A mix of reasons, both domestic and foreign, is keeping market enthusiasm on GDP numbers muted ...
India GDP Q2 Growth Data Highlights: GDP growth shows strength of Indian economy, says FM Sitharaman
India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the second quarter of the current financial year grew at 8.2% as agai ...
NDTV Profit on MSN
Nifty's Record High, Q2 GDP Boost, Trump Vows Migration Pause, And More — The Week That Was
From the stock market scaling new all-time highs to India's GDP growing by 8.2% in Q2, here are the key news events that shaped the week gone by.
India’s core economic challenge is the decoupling of rising productivity from purchasing power, writes Virat Singh ...
Everyone has a stake in keeping the unemployment rate low. A single percentage point increase in unemployment is tied to a jumpin the poverty rate of about 0.4 to 0.7 percentage points. Higher rates ...
The Business & Financial Times on MSN
From extraction to enterprise: How local firms can ride the mining-tech wave
By Joseph BensonFrom Ounces to OpportunityGhana has re-emerged as Africa’s leading gold producer, and its upward trajectory ...
The UK's FTSE 100 blue-chip index closed Friday 0.56% in the red as investors digest a string of major economic data releases during the session, including the surprise monthly contraction of the ...
Her Treasury are shouting 'Fire! Fire! we have a structural deficit, this cannot go on, it needs to be addressed." Ms Richardson laughed when RNZ asked her if she would debate Ms Willis, saying it was ...
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