
UN cuts India's 2025 growth outlook to 6.3% from 6.6%
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New Delhi: The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA) has downgraded India's growth forecast for 2025 to 6.3%, from 6.6% projected earlier, attributing it to trade tensions and policy uncertainty.Despite the downgrade, India will remain one of the world's fastest-growing large economies, supported by strong domestic consumption and government spending, according to UNDESA's 'World Economic Situation and Prospects 2025 mid-year update'. "Resilient private consumption and strong public investment, alongside robust services exports, will support economic growth," it said.Looking ahead to 2026, UNDESA forecast India's gross domestic product (GDP) growth to recover a tad to 6.4%. Optimism in financial markets, solid gains in stock indices, pick up in manufacturing activity, and increase in exports show that "India's economy is not only holding firm but also making headway in an uncertain global environment", the government said on Friday.Manufacturing sector's share in India's economic growth remained steady in the last decade, moving to 17.3% in FY24 from 17.2% in FY14. "This steady growth highlights the sector's increasing role in India's economic landscape," the government noted.On April 2, the US imposed a reciprocal tariff of 26% on imports from India. Key sectors such as pharmaceuticals, electronics, semiconductors, and energy were exempted from the duty. President Donald Trump later announced a 90-day pause on the tariff implementation until July 9, although a baseline tariff of 10% remains in place.While the exemptions may soften the economic impact on India, the report noted that these may not be permanent.Overall, India's exports increased to $824.9 billion in FY25, an increase of 6.01% from $778.1 billion in FY24."Exports, especially in strategic areas like defence production, are expanding steadily," said the government on Friday.Defence exports surged to ₹23,622 crore in FY25 from ₹686 crore in FY14. "The tariff shock risks hitting vulnerable developing countries hard, slowing growth, slashing export revenues, and compounding debt challenges, especially as these economies are already struggling to make the investments needed for long-term, sustainable development," said Li Junhua, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs.Economic growth in the US will decelerate to 1.6% in 2025 from 2.8% in 2024- below the previous forecast of 1.9%--as higher tariffs and policy uncertainty are expected to dampen private investment and consumption, as per the report.China's growth is also expected to slow to 4.6% from an earlier estimate of 4.8%, due to weaker consumer sentiment, disruptions in export-focused manufacturing and ongoing issues in the property sector, it added.Globally, GDP growth is anticipated to fall to 2.4% in 2025 from 2.8%."Slower global growth, elevated inflationary pressures and weakening global trade including a projected halving of trade growth jeopardise progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals," said UNDESA.
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OpenAI aims to do what Reliance did with its low-cost strategy in India's telecom market, accumulating millions of users and retaining them with cheaper plans. However, OpenAI is likely to face intense competition from its specifically for the Indian market, this localised, cost-effective ChatGPT subscription signals a strategic pivot for OpenAI toward one of the world's most dynamic technology ecosystems. While India has long been a high-engagement market for global tech players, this marks the first time OpenAI has introduced a geography-specific pricing model tailored to local user needs, payment habits and price is not just another large market. It is a unique combination of scale, youth population and digital infrastructure. With over 1.4 billion people, a booming startup scene, and the world's highest mobile internet usage, the country presents a fertile ground for mass adoption of generative AI. OpenAI's move reflects both a recognition of this opportunity and a calculated bet on India becoming the proving ground for scalable AI deployment in other countries in the Global SouthChatGPT Go sits strategically between the free tier and the more expensive Plus and Pro offerings, providing a balanced mix of capability and accessibility. At Rs 399 per month, it offers significantly enhanced usage limits compared to the free version, including access to the latest GPT-5 model, faster performance, priority response times, and expanded message sets ChatGPT Go apart is not just its pricing, but its thoughtful localisation. For the first time, OpenAI has enabled Indian users to subscribe using UPI. Additionally, all billing is presented in rupees, eliminating friction related to currency conversion and international payments. 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Its user diversity, mobile-first orientation, and rapid feedback cycles make it possible to fine-tune features before rolling them out globally. By selecting India as the first country for a localised plan launch, OpenAI is treating it not just as a revenue market, but as a strategic lab for future growth choices indicate a nuanced strategy, combining ease of access for users with infrastructural alignment for future enterprise, educational, and governmental its strengths, the ChatGPT Go plan does not come without challenges. At Rs 399/month, the subscription is still out of reach for many users in India's Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns and rural regions. While more accessible than the Plus plan, further price segmentation or student-focused pricing may be required to achieve true mass scale. Language support remains another critical hurdle. India's linguistic diversity is vast, and while GPT-5 has improved multilingual capabilities, conversational fluency, cultural sensitivity and dialectal understanding will require significant advancement. Data privacy is another potential friction point. With India's new data laws, any perceived opacity around data usage or model training could raise concerns among regulators and users alike. OpenAI is already facing a lawsuit in India from media firms for copyright infringement. Local hosting, transparency reports and ethical AI practices will be key to sustaining decision to localise and downscale pricing in India also reflects a preemptive response to intensifying competition. The Indian AI space is heating up, with major global firms expanding their presence, and domestic startups like Krutrim, Sarvam AI and BharatGPT developing localised language models and enterprise solutions. 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In India, where hundreds of millions rely on Android phones and Google services, Gemini is poised to become the default AI assistant. Integration gives Gemini an enormous advantage in terms of daily usage and user retention. Gemini also shows signs of strong multilingual capabilities, with growing support for Indian languages. While ChatGPT supports multiple languages, Google has the advantage of pre-existing translation infrastructure, vast regional datasets and deep localisation Gemini leverages its existing ecosystem power, Perplexity AI offers a different kind of value which combines the simplicity of search with the intelligence of AI. It's a hybrid between a chatbot and a real-time search engine, and its biggest asset is transparency. Perplexity provides answers with real-time web sources, enabling users to not only get concise summaries but also verify the information through direct citations. This makes it especially appealing to students, researchers, and professionals who want reliable, up-to-date launch of ChatGPT Go is no doubt a bold move to unlock the Indian market. But OpenAI is not alone in this race as Gemini and Perplexity too gather speed. The future of AI in India will not be won on pricing alone. It will be shaped by how well each platform adapts to Indian realities, from language to platform access to cultural context.