
Growth of eight core sectors halved to 2.3% in February, before West Asia crisis began
The Hindu
Core sector growth in India plummeted to 2.3% in February, amid declining domestic production and impending West Asia crisis impacts.
India’s core industrial growth slowed sharply even before the crisis in West Asia began, with government data showing growth in the eight core sectors of the economy slowing to a three-month low of 2.3% in February 2026.
This slowdown in February, as shown by the data on the Index of Eight Core Industries released by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry on Friday, comes at a time when economists and policymakers are expecting a further slowdown in March in response to the supply and export constraints brought on by the war in West Asia. The data also shows that domestic production of oil, gas, and petroleum products had been shrinking for months, which is now compounded by the external supply constraints.
“Even before the start of the West Asia crisis, the growth of the core sector output in India had slowed to a three-month low of 2.3% in February 2026,” Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist at ICRA said. “The sequential halving in year-on-year growth from 4.7% in January 2026 was relatively broad-based, with only two sectors, namely cement and steel eking out a year-on-year rise that was above 3.5%.”
The cement sector grew by 9.3% in February 2026, the best performance out of the eight sectors measured in the index. However, this was a four-month low, with the sector breaking a three-month streak of double-digit growth.
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The steel sector, too, saw relatively robust growth, but slower than previous months, at a three-month low of 7.2% in February 2026.













