In its recent assessment, the International Monetary Fund India’s national accounts statistics, which includes key figures such as Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross Value Added (GVA), a grade of ...
A revised GDP series with base year 2022-23 is expected by February 2026, incorporating GST and UPI data, MCA-21 records, and broader coverage of unlisted firms and financial services. In ITS 2025 ...
New Delhi: Malayalam actor Dileep has been acquitted in the sensational 2017 South actress abduction and sexual assault case. The trial lasted for about eight long years. According to The Hindu report ...
IMF is of the view that India’s national account statistics are based on the outdated base year of 2011-12, which makes the GDP estimates unrepresentative of today’s economy. However, the IMF has ...
California needs to dramatically increase its focus and spending on roads, storm drains, the electrical grid and other infrastructure systems to maintain its position as one of the world’s dominant ...
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman clarified that the IMF did not question India's growth figures, attributing the 'C' grade on national accounts to an outdated base year. India will shift to a ...
Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) to the government V Anantha Nageswaran has said that India need not be worried about the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) annual review that assigned a ‘C’ grade to the ...
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has given a ‘C’ Grade to India’s national accounts and government finance data infrastructure in its 2025 Data Adequacy Assessment exercise. This grade signifies ...
New Delhi: After the National Statistics Office on Friday released the quarterly GDP data for the months of June to September, Congress leader Jairam Ramesh termed them to be ironic, while referring ...
Ramesh is now explicitly tying the IMF’s grade to the latest NSO print to argue that India’s “fastest growing major economy” claim sits uneasily with external scrutiny of its statistics. Congress ...
NEW DELHI: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has ranked India second-lowest, assigning it a “C grade” due to significant shortcomings in the nation’s economic data, according to its latest annual ...
The International Monetary Fund has given India’s national accounts statistics, which include data such as the Gross Domestic Product and the Gross Value Added, a “C” grade, its second-lowest rating.