India’s economy could face pressure if global crude oil prices keep rising. According to SMC Global Securities’ Vandana Bharti, every $10 increase in oil prices may reduce India’s GDP growth by about 0.5%. With nearly half of India’s crude imported from the Middle East, tensions near the Strait of Hormuz could disrupt supply, raise inflation, weaken the rupee and slow economic activity across sectors.
How Middle East tensions are a serious risk for India's economy
Rising tensions involving the US, Israel and Iran have pushed oil prices sharply higher, adding a “war premium” to global crude markets. Analyst Vandana Bharti warns India is vulnerable because about 50% of its crude oil comes from the Middle East. Higher shipping costs, insurance premiums and supply uncertainty could hurt economic stability, trigger inflation and affect currency and financial markets.
What rising oil prices mean for India's economy and energy Security
Crude oil prices jumped from around $69 to nearly $78 per barrel within a week amid Middle East tensions. If the crisis continues, prices could reach $85-$87, according to market experts. India has emergency reserves for around 25-30 days, but supply disruptions could still hurt Asian economies, raise fertiliser costs and increase pressure on India’s economic growth.
(With ANI inputs)