BJP Hits Back At Rahul Gandhi: Rahul Gandhi should stop spreading fear… BJP hits back at Congress MP’s statement on economic tsunami.
New Delhi. Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has claimed that a severe economic tsunami is coming in India and the reason for this is that the government has removed all economic safeguards. There will be such an economic crisis that no one has ever seen, no one can stop it. BJP has hit back at this statement of Rahul Gandhi saying that it is not only wrong but it is an attempt to spread fear among the people. BJP leader Amit Malviya said that if India’s economic safeguards had indeed been removed, then why is the economy resilient despite rising crude oil prices, conflict in West Asia, supply chain disruptions, global financial tightening and persistent geopolitical uncertainty?
Rahul Gandhi’s claim that India is heading towards an “economic tsunami” because the Government has removed all shock absorbers is not just wrong, it is classic fear-mongering.
If India’s shock absorbers had truly been removed, why is the economy continuing to show resilience… pic.twitter.com/7QZvdL8OPi
— Amit Malviya (@amitmalviya) June 4, 2026
The government has also taken direct measures to protect citizens, businesses and jobs, Malviya said. When global crude oil prices rose, excise duty cuts on petrol and diesel brought relief to consumers. Supply-side interventions and export restrictions were used as necessary to maintain domestic availability and control inflation. The Modi government has strengthened India before, during and after repeated shocks such as the Covid crisis, Russia-Ukraine conflict, rising crude oil prices, rising global interest rates, supply chain disruptions and now instability in West Asia.

The BJP leader pointed out that despite facing many unexpected events, India remains the fastest growing major economy in the world. From being among the weak five economies, it has become one of the top five economies. The Modi government has maintained macroeconomic stability, expanded infrastructure at an unprecedented pace and strengthened domestic manufacturing. India faces global challenges, but it is meeting them with strong reserves, low inflation, improved infrastructure spending, strong domestic demand, record foreign direct investment, adequate food reserves and targeted support for small and medium enterprises and industries.
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