India service economy grew at its slowest pace in 14 months in March 2026

India’s services economy lost momentum for a second consecutive month in March, growing at its slowest pace of expansion in more than a year as demand cooled and inflationary pressures built amid an ongoing Iran war.

The HSBC India Services Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, fell to 57.5 last month from 58.1 in February. While the reading remains above the 50-mark that separates expansion from contraction, it represents the softest rate of expansion since January 2025.

The slowdown reflects a cooling in new business intakes, which moderated to a 14-month low. Survey participants noted that domestic demand was weighed down by market volatility and the lingering impact of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which dampened tourism and broader commercial activity.

Export Engine Revs Up

Despite the domestic deceleration, India’s service providers saw a surge in international appetite. New export orders rose at the fastest clip since mid-2024, with broad-based gains reported from markets in Asia, Europe, and the Americas.

“Demand remained resilient, led by new export orders,” HSBC Chief India Economist Pranjul Bhandari said in a statement. “As such, service providers’ expectations for future activity remained positive.”

The divergence between cooling domestic sales and heating foreign demand suggests that India’s services engine is increasingly leaning on global markets to offset local fatigue.

Inflationary Headwinds

A primary concern for policymakers will be the sharp spike in operating expenses. Input cost inflation accelerated to its fastest pace in nearly four years, driven by a broad rally in the prices of fuel, electricity, and essential food items including meat, vegetables, and cooking oil.

In response, service providers hiked their own selling prices at the quickest rate in seven months to protect margins. Consumer services saw the most aggressive increase in input costs, while the Finance & Insurance segment led the way in raising charges for end-users.

“Input cost inflation accelerated to its fastest pace since 2022, indicating that higher fuel, transport and logistics costs are feeding into services,” Bhandari said.

Labour Market Resilience

The cooling activity has yet to hit the labour market. In a sign of corporate confidence, job creation accelerated to its strongest pace since mid-2025. Firms reported a third straight month of hiring, bolstered by the highest level of business optimism in nearly 12 years.

Companies attributed this “upbeat” outlook to aggressive advertising campaigns and hopes for a recovery in domestic market conditions.

Composite Weakness

The broader economy also showed signs of a soft patch. The HSBC India Composite PMI Output Index, which weights both manufacturing and services, dropped to 57.0 from 58.9. This marks the weakest expansion for the private sector in nearly three-and-a-half years.

While manufacturers saw a slight improvement in international demand, the composite data reinforces a narrative of a cooling economy grappling with “sticky” inflation and a domestic market that is finally beginning to feel the pinch of higher costs.

Latest

OpenAI, Anthropic, Google unite to combat AI model copying in China

OpenAI, Anthropic and Google are sharing information through the Frontier Model Forum, an industry non-profit that they founded with Microsoft in 2023.

RBI Monetary Policy: Status quo on repo rate likely as Iran war weighs on rupee, India’s GDP growth

RBI is likely to keep the repo rate at 5.25%, after signalling a long pause at its last monetary policy meeting, though the outlook has clouded due to Iran war.

Rupee caught in tug-of-war between RBI-led unwinding, Trump’s Iran war deadline

Bankers and forex traders believe rupee may have found a near-term equilibrium around the 93/dollar level after extreme uncertainty that pushed it to 95.

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson said to resign amid turnaround turmoil

Air India Campbell Wilson is currently serving his notice period. It remains unclear whether Tata Group has identified a successor.

Multi-Cap Fund vs Multi-Asset Allocation Fund: Which one to choose and why?

Over the last one year, multi-asset allocation funds have done well, but over three and five years, performance is nearly similar to those of multi-cap funds.

Topics

Tired of typing? Google’s new AI app does it for you even without internet

The Google AI Edge Eloquent app is available only on iOS at the moment. Android users will have to wait for a while to use it on their devices.

Trump not first: The history of ‘Stone Age’ threats

US President Donald Trump has vowed to bomb Iran hard enough to send 'them back to the Stone Ages' if Tehran does not agree to a peace deal. However, Trump does

Which country exports the most oranges? All you need to know

Spain’s favourable climate and infrastructure boost its global orange export lead

Australia’s highest-risk category: Should Indian students worry about study abroad?

Stricter visa rules raise documentation standards but keep study opportunities open

Maharashtra to introduce 4-year UG programmes with honours, research degrees

Maharashtra to introduce 4-year UG programmes with honours, research degrees

Netflix launches safe, ad-free gaming app for children under 8 – All details

Parents worried about ads and spending in kids' apps now have a new option, as Netflix introduces its gaming platform without interruptions or extra costs.

Apple MacBook Neo Now at ₹64,490! Here’s when and how to unlock this limited-time deal

Grab the Apple MacBook Neo at ₹64,490 on Flipkart with exchange, bank discounts, EMI plans, and cashback offers. Here’s how you can unlock this deal.

Meet Mriganka Sur, the IIT Kanpur engineer called Newton of brain science at MIT

From IIT Kanpur to MIT, Professor Mriganka Sur’s journey spans electrical engineering to pioneering neuroscience, driven by a quest to understand intelligence
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img