India’s economy is still expanding quickly, but the country is no longer fifth in the IMF’s latest global GDP rankings. A weaker rupee, dollar-based comparisons and a new GDP series help explain why the headline has changed without overturning the larger growth story
India’s return to sixth place in the latest IMF global GDP rankings sounds, at first, like a contradiction. How can a country that is still projected to be the fastest-growing major economy lose ground in the rankings?
The answer is simpler than it sounds. These rankings are not based only on how fast an economy is growing. They are based on the total size of the economy in current US dollars. In the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook (WEO), India’s nominal GDP for 2026 is put at about $4.15 trillion, behind the UK’s $4.26 trillion, even as India’s real GDP growth is projected at 6.5%.
The answer is simpler than it sounds. These rankings are not based only on how fast an economy is growing. They are based on the total size of the economy in current US dollars. In the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook (WEO), India’s nominal GDP for 2026 is put at about $4.15 trillion, behind the UK’s $4.26 trillion, even as India’s real GDP growth is projected at 6.5%.