| Relevance: GS Paper III (Indian Economy — External Sector, Balance of Payments) | Source: RBI Data, 2026 |
1 · What Happened
| Money sent home by Indians working abroad — called remittances — has hit a record. In FY 2025-26, it crossed $100 billion for the first time ever, reaching $110.47 billion (a 26% jump over the previous year).
This flood of foreign money helped India record a small surplus in its Balance of Payments (BoP) — even though foreign investors were pulling money out and fresh foreign investment was weak. In simple words, the hard-earned money of our overseas workers quietly held up the economy in a tough year. |
2 · The Headline Numbers
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$110.47 bn
Total remittances in FY26 — an all-time high
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$31.07 bn
Sent in Jan–Mar 2026 alone — best first quarter in 13 years
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$7.22 bn
BoP surplus for the quarter, despite capital outflows
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3 · The Core Idea — Balance of Payments (BoP)
| Think of the Balance of Payments as a country’s full record of money coming in and going out with the rest of the world. It has two main parts: |
| Current Account | Capital Account | |
| Trade in goods and services, plus earnings and gifts. Remittances sit here, as “unilateral transfers” (money sent with nothing given back). | Flow of investments and loans — like FDI (factories, long-term) and FPI (stock-market money, short-term). |
Why did remittances rise so much?
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4 · A Quiet Shift — Who Sends the Money Now?
| Falling — The Gulf (GCC) | Rising — US & UK | |
| Gulf countries (UAE, Saudi, etc.) were once the backbone, but their share fell from 47% (2016-17) to 38%. | Western economies are rising, as more Indians take high-skill white-collar jobs there — though these now face an AI automation risk. |
5 · The Catch — Why Remittances Are Not a Permanent Fix
| Remittances are like a helpful relative bailing you out each month — welcome, but not a substitute for a steady income. India’s deeper external weaknesses remain, as shown below. |
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The FDI Leak
Money Comes, Then Leaves
Gross FDI was a big $94.53 bn, but after foreign firms sent profits back home, net FDI was only $7.65 bn.
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The Old Drains
Oil & Gold Imports
Heavy crude oil and gold imports keep draining our foreign exchange, widening the trade gap.
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The Way Ahead — Building Real Strength
- Make foreign firms reinvest here: Fix the reasons they send profits abroad — easier rules, less red tape — so investment stays in India.
- Cut needless gold imports: Encourage Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) so savings go into productive assets, not idle metal.
- Boost real exports: Use Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes to grow manufacturing exports, so the economy stands on trade strength, not just diaspora money.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to India’s Balance of Payments and remittances, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (b) 1 and 3 only
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