GATE Economics (XH-C1) 2027 – Complete Guide: Eligibility, Syllabus, Cutoff, Career Scope & Preparation Tips
Your one-stop, research-backed guide for aspiring Economics graduates to crack GATE and unlock IIT admissions, PSU careers, and government-funded fellowships.
1. What is GATE Economics (XH-C1)?
GATE – the Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering – is India’s premier national-level examination conducted jointly by the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and the seven IITs on behalf of the Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India. Although the exam’s name mentions “engineering,” it is far broader in scope and now includes Humanities & Social Sciences under the paper code XH.
Within the XH umbrella, Economics (XH-C1) is the sectional paper designed specifically for graduates in Economics and related disciplines. This paper enables Economics students to compete alongside engineering graduates for admission to MA/M.Sc. Economics programmes at IITs, PhD positions at premier research institutions, government fellowships, and PSU-linked research roles.
GATE 2026 was conducted by IIT Guwahati on 7th February 2026 for the Economics paper. Results were declared on 19th March 2026. The next cycle — GATE 2027 — will be conducted by one of the IITs (to be announced around August 2026).
2. Key Highlights at a Glance
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering – Economics |
| Paper Code | XH-C1 (Under Humanities & Social Sciences – XH) |
| Conducting Body (2026) | IIT Guwahati on behalf of MoE, Government of India |
| Exam Frequency | Once a year (typically February) |
| Mode of Exam | Computer-Based Test (CBT) – Online |
| Total Questions | 65 (10 GA + 15 Reasoning & Comprehension + 40 Economics) |
| Total Marks | 100 |
| Duration | 3 Hours (180 minutes) |
| Question Types | MCQ, MSQ (Multiple Select), NAT (Numerical Answer) |
| Negative Marking | MCQ only: −1/3 (1-mark Q), −2/3 (2-mark Q). No penalty for NAT & MSQ. |
| Score Validity | 3 years (for admissions); 1 year (for PSU recruitment) |
| Official Website | gate2026.iitg.ac.in (for 2026); new portal announced Aug 2026 for GATE 2027 |
| Approx. Candidates Appeared (2025) | ~2,973 students (relatively niche & low-competition paper) |
3. Important Dates
GATE 2026 – Confirmed Dates (Already Completed)
| Event | Date | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Official Notification Released | 5 August 2025 | ✅ Confirmed |
| Registration Opens (GOAPS) | 28 August 2025 | ✅ Confirmed |
| Last Date to Apply (Without Late Fee) | 28 September 2025 | ✅ Confirmed |
| Last Date to Apply (With Late Fee) | 13 October 2025 | ✅ Confirmed |
| Correction Window | 10 November 2025 | ✅ Confirmed |
| GATE Economics (XH-C1) Exam Date | 7 February 2026 | ✅ Conducted |
| Answer Key Released | 22 February 2026 | ✅ Released |
| Result Declared | 19 March 2026 | ✅ Declared |
GATE 2027 – Expected Dates (Tentative)
| Event | Expected Date | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Official Notification | August 2026 | 🔄 Expected |
| Registration Opens | Late August / Early September 2026 | 🔄 Expected |
| Last Date (Without Late Fee) | Late September 2026 | 🔄 Expected |
| Exam Dates | February 2027 (4 days) | 🔄 Expected |
| Result Declaration | March 2027 | 🔄 Expected |
4. Eligibility Criteria
🎓 Nationality
Indian nationals are eligible. International candidates from Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Ethiopia, and UAE may also apply but must appear at exam centres in India only.
🎂 Age Limit
📚 Educational Qualification
| Qualifying Degree | Eligibility Condition |
|---|---|
| B.A. / B.Sc. Economics (3-year program) | Currently in 3rd year OR have completed the degree |
| B.A. (Hons.) Economics | Currently in 3rd year or above OR completed |
| B.B.A. Economics / B.Com. Economics | Currently in 3rd year or above OR completed |
| M.A. / M.Sc. Economics (1st year or above) | Eligible; must complete degree by 31 Dec 2027 |
| Integrated B.S.-M.S. (Economics-related) | Currently in 3rd year or above OR completed |
| Any other government-approved degree in a related field | As per official brochure (verify from gate.iitg.ac.in) |
📊 Attempts & Percentage
- Number of attempts: Unlimited — there is no restriction on how many times you can appear.
- Minimum percentage: No minimum marks required to appear for GATE. However, most IITs and PSUs require 55% (General/OBC) or 50% (SC/ST/PwD) in the qualifying degree at the time of admission/recruitment.
- Final-year students can apply, provided they complete their degree by 31 December 2027.
5. Reservation & Application Fee
💰 Application Fee (As per GATE 2026 — verify from GATE 2027 brochure)
| Category | Regular Period | Extended Period (Late Fee) |
|---|---|---|
| Female / SC / ST / PwD | ₹1,000 | ₹1,500 |
| All Others (General / OBC-NCL / EWS) | ₹2,000 | ₹2,500 |
| International Candidates | USD 100 (approximately) | USD 120 (approximately) |
Note: Fees are based on the GATE 2026 brochure. GATE 2027 fees may vary slightly. Always verify from the official notification at gate2027.iit[x].ac.in.
📌 Reservation Policy
| Category | Reservation % | Fee Concession | Age Relaxation |
|---|---|---|---|
| SC / ST | SC: 15%, ST: 7.5% | ✅ 50% fee reduction | N/A (No age limit) |
| OBC-NCL | 27% | ❌ Full fee applies | N/A (No age limit) |
| EWS | 10% | ❌ Full fee applies | N/A (No age limit) |
| PwBD (PwD) | 5% (horizontal) | ✅ 50% fee reduction | N/A (No age limit) |
| General (UR) | — | Full fee applies | N/A (No age limit) |
6. How to Apply – Step-by-Step Process
Visit the Official GATE Portal (GOAPS)
Go to the official website (gate2027.iit[x].ac.in — announced around August 2026). Click on “New Registration” on the GOAPS (GATE Online Application Processing System) portal.
Register as New User
Enter your full name, valid email ID, and mobile number. Create a strong password. You will receive an Enrolment ID on your registered email.
Fill the Application Form
Log in with your Enrolment ID. Fill in personal details, educational qualifications, and select XH as the paper and XH-C1 (Economics) as your sectional choice. Choose your preferred exam city (up to 3 cities within the same zone).
Upload Documents
Upload scanned copies of: Passport-size photograph (JPEG, max 500 KB), signature, degree/provisional certificate or hall ticket (if final year), and category/PwD/EWS certificate (if applicable).
Pay Application Fee
Pay online via Net Banking, Debit/Credit Card, or UPI. Keep the payment receipt for your records.
Submit & Download Confirmation
Review all details carefully before final submission. Download and save the application PDF for future reference. Use the Correction Window (if opened) to fix minor errors.
7. Exam Pattern & Marking Scheme
The GATE Economics (XH-C1) paper is a 100-mark, 3-hour CBT exam with three clearly defined sections:
10 Questions (5×1 mark + 5×2 marks) — Common to all GATE papers
15 Questions — Compulsory for all XH candidates
40 Questions (20×1 mark + 20×2 marks) — Your subject section
| Section | No. of Questions | Marks per Q | Total Marks | Negative Marking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General Aptitude | 10 | 1 or 2 | 15 | −1/3 (1-mark MCQ), −2/3 (2-mark MCQ) |
| Reasoning & Comprehension (XH-B1) | 15 | 1 or 2 | 25 | −1/3 (1-mark MCQ), −2/3 (2-mark MCQ) |
| Economics (XH-C1) | 40 | 1 or 2 | 60 | −1/3 (1-mark MCQ), −2/3 (2-mark MCQ) |
| TOTAL | — | 100 | No penalty for NAT & MSQ questions | |
Question Types Explained
- MCQ (Multiple Choice Questions): 4 options, only 1 correct answer. Negative marking applies.
- MSQ (Multiple Select Questions): Multiple correct answers possible. NO negative marking.
- NAT (Numerical Answer Type): You type the exact number using a virtual keypad. NO negative marking.
XH-B1: Reasoning & Comprehension Section (Compulsory)
This section, unique to the XH paper, tests four skills: Reading Comprehension (understanding complex passages), Expression (stylistic and rhetorical analysis), Analytical Reasoning (drawing inferences), and Logical Reasoning (evaluating arguments). Think of it as a mix of GRE/GMAT Verbal and LSAT Logical Reasoning — it does NOT test grammar or vocabulary directly.
8. Detailed Syllabus – All 7 Chapters
The GATE Economics syllabus is divided into 7 core chapters, released by IIT Guwahati on 8 August 2025 for GATE 2026 (and expected to remain identical for GATE 2027 unless notified otherwise).
📘 Chapter 1: Microeconomics
- Theory of Consumer Behaviour: Cardinal & Ordinal approach, Marshallian & Hicksian demand, Slutsky equation, Duality Theorem
- Homogeneous & Homothetic utility functions; Euler’s Theorem
- Theory of Firm: Market structures – competitive & non-competitive equilibria, efficiency properties
- Game Theory: Non-cooperative games, Nash Equilibrium, SPNE, Bayesian Nash Equilibrium, Perfect Bayesian Equilibria
- Welfare Economics: Pareto-Optimality, Social Welfare Function, Fundamental Theorems
- General Equilibrium Analysis; Theory of Agency costs; Theory of Search
- Factor Pricing: Marginal productivity theory; Monopolistic exploitation
📗 Chapter 2: Macroeconomics
- National Income Accounting; Keynesian framework; IS-LM model
- Monetary & Fiscal Policy; Money multiplier; Banking system
- Business cycles; Consumption theories (Permanent Income, Life Cycle)
- Investment theories; Tobin’s q
- Inflation: Demand-pull, Cost-push, Phillips curve, Expectations-augmented
- Open Economy Macroeconomics: Mundell-Fleming model, BP curve
- Growth Theories: Solow, Harrod-Domar, Endogenous growth
- New Keynesian Economics; DSGE models (basics)
📙 Chapter 3: Statistics, Econometrics & Mathematical Economics
- Probability: Distributions (Normal, Binomial, Poisson), Central Limit Theorem
- Statistical Inference: Estimation (OLS, MLE), Hypothesis Testing, Confidence Intervals
- Simple & Multiple Regression Analysis; Gauss-Markov Theorem; R²
- Econometric problems: Heteroscedasticity, Autocorrelation, Multicollinearity, Endogeneity
- Instrumental Variables; 2SLS; Panel Data methods
- Time Series: ARIMA, Stationarity, Cointegration
- Mathematical Economics: Linear programming, Optimization (Lagrangian), Matrix algebra, Differential equations
📒 Chapter 4: International Economics
- Theories of International Trade: Ricardian, Heckscher-Ohlin, Specific Factors
- Trade policy: Tariffs, Quotas, Non-tariff barriers, Strategic trade policy
- Balance of Payments (BoP); Current & Capital Account
- Exchange rate determination: PPP, Interest Rate Parity
- WTO, GATT, Regional Trading Agreements
- International capital flows; FDI theories
📕 Chapter 5: Public Economics
- Role of government; Market failures: Externalities, Public goods, Information asymmetry
- Taxation: Incidence, Excess burden, Optimal taxation (Ramsey rule)
- Public expenditure: Cost-benefit analysis, Wagner’s law
- Fiscal Federalism: Tiebout model, Grant-in-aid
- Social Security; Health and education economics
- Indian Public Finance: Fiscal policy, FRBM Act, GST
📓 Chapter 6: Development Economics
- Concepts of Development vs Growth; HDI, Sen’s Capability approach
- Poverty: Measurement (FGT index, Sen index), causes
- Inequality: Lorenz curve, Gini coefficient, Kuznets hypothesis
- Dual economy models: Lewis model, Harris-Todaro
- Agriculture and rural development; Green revolution
- Role of institutions; Structural change theories
- Foreign aid, MFIs, Micro-finance
📔 Chapter 7: Indian Economy
- Pre-independence economic structure; Planning process in India
- 1991 Economic Reforms: LPG, FEMA, SEBI, banking sector
- Agriculture sector: Land reforms, MSP, APMC, food security
- Industrial policy; MSME; Make in India
- Monetary policy: RBI, Inflation targeting, Repo rate
- Fiscal policy: Budget, FRBM, GST, Tax-to-GDP
- Poverty & inequality in India: NFHS, NSSO/NSO data
- Labour markets: MGNREGA, PLI scheme, Employment data
- External sector: Export-import policy, FDI/FPI, CAD
9. Previous Year Cutoff Marks
The GATE qualifying cutoff is the minimum score required to be declared as “GATE Qualified” — i.e., to receive a valid scorecard. This is separate from the cutoff required for admission to specific IIT programmes (which is typically higher).
| Year | General / UR | OBC-NCL / EWS | SC / ST / PwD | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GATE 2026 (XH – Economics) | 41.0 | 37.0 | 27.6 | ✅ Confirmed |
| GATE 2025 (XH) | ~40.0 | ~36.0 | ~26.7 | Based on trend |
| GATE 2024 (XH) | ~40.0 | ~36.0 | ~26.7 | Approximate |
GATE Score vs. Raw Marks
Your GATE Score is a normalised score out of 1000 — this is what IITs, NITs, and PSUs use for shortlisting, not your raw marks. A good GATE score for Economics admission at IITs typically starts around 650+ out of 1000 for top IITs.
10. Institutes Accepting GATE Economics (XH-C1) Score
| Institute | Programme Offered | Admission Process |
|---|---|---|
| IIT Delhi (HSS Dept.) | M.Sc. Economics | GATE score + Written Test + Interview |
| IIT Madras | MA Economics (4-semester) | GATE score + Interview |
| IIT Kanpur | M.Sc. Economics | GATE score + Written Test by IIT Kanpur |
| IIT Bombay | PhD in Economics | GATE score + Interview |
| IIT Roorkee (HUSS) | PhD / Research | GATE score + Interview |
| IIT Kharagpur | MA Economics / PhD | GATE score + Interview |
| IIT Hyderabad | M.Sc. / PhD (Liberal Arts) | GATE score |
| NITs & Central Universities | MA / M.Sc. Economics (varies) | GATE score-based merit |
| Various IITs | Direct PhD in Economics | GATE score + Interview |
11. Career Scope & Financial Benefits
IIT/IISc M.A./M.Sc.
Join India’s top economics programmes with world-class faculty, research labs, and networking opportunities.
PhD & Research
Pursue doctoral research at IITs, IGIDR, ISI, or top international universities. Lead policy research at think tanks.
PSU Careers
PSUs are beginning to use GATE XH scores for economist-grade positions in planning and analytics roles.
Teaching / Academia
An IIT M.Sc./PhD credential significantly boosts eligibility for faculty positions at colleges and universities.
Policy & Think Tanks
Positions at RBI, NITI Aayog, World Bank, IMF, and policy research organizations value IIT economics graduates.
Corporate Analytics
Quantitative economics background from IITs opens roles in financial analytics, data science, and consulting.
💰 Government Financial Assistance (Scholarships & Stipends)
| Programme | Monthly Stipend | Duration | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| M.E./M.Tech (GATE-qualified with MHRD scholarship) | ₹12,400/month | 2 years | Ministry of Education |
| Direct PhD (after B.E./B.Tech/M.Sc.) | ₹37,000/month (Years 1–2) | First 2 years | MoE / Institute |
| PhD – Senior Research Fellowship | ₹42,000/month | Subsequent years | MoE / Institute |
| CSIR/UGC JRF (separate exam, complementary) | ₹31,000–₹37,000/month | 2–5 years | CSIR / UGC |
GATE score validity for PSU recruitment is 1 year from the date of result. For academic admissions (IITs, NITs, IIISc), it is valid for 3 years — so a GATE 2026 score is valid up to March 2029.
12. Preparation Strategy & Best Books
📅 Month-wise Study Plan (5 months before exam)
Month 1 – Foundation Building
Master Microeconomics (consumer theory, firm theory) + Macroeconomics basics (National Income, IS-LM). Begin General Aptitude weekly practice.
Month 2 – Quant & Econometrics
Dedicate this month entirely to Statistics, Econometrics, and Mathematical Economics. These topics are heavily numerical and score-decisive.
Month 3 – Applied Economics
Cover International Economics, Public Economics, and Development Economics. Connect real-world data (Indian Budget, BoP data, WTO news) to concepts.
Month 4 – Indian Economy + Comprehension
Intensively cover Indian Economy topics (current reforms, RBI policy, GST, FRBM). Simultaneously practice Reasoning & Comprehension passages daily (20 min/day).
Month 5 – Revision, Mock Tests & PYQs
Solve all available GATE Economics previous year papers (2021 onwards). Take at least 3–4 full-length mock tests under exam conditions. Identify weak spots and revise.
📚 Best Books for GATE Economics Preparation
Microeconomics (Pindyck & Rubinfeld)
8th Edition – Standard reference for Micro theory, Game Theory, and Market Structures
Macroeconomics (H.L. Ahuja)
Comprehensive coverage of all Macro topics as per the GATE syllabus
Introductory Econometrics (Wooldridge)
Best for OLS, IV, Panel data, and all econometric topics tested in GATE
Mathematics for Economists (Simon & Blume)
Covers Optimization, Linear Algebra, and Differential Equations for Mathematical Economics
International Economics (Krugman & Obstfeld)
Clear explanations of trade theories, exchange rates, and BOP for International Economics
Public Finance (Harvey Rosen)
Covers market failures, taxation, public expenditure theory for the Public Economics section
Indian Economy (Ramesh Singh)
Best for Indian Economy section — covers all reform, policy, and current affairs topics
Statistics (S.C. Gupta & V.K. Kapoor)
Comprehensive statistics reference for probability, distributions, and inference
🎯 Top Preparation Tips from GATE Toppers
- Make concise notes for each topic — especially formulas in Econometrics and Mathematical Economics.
- Never skip General Aptitude — 15 free marks are up for grabs with minimal preparation effort.
- Practice Reasoning & Comprehension (XH-B1) daily — 25 marks from this section can make or break your rank.
- Attempt PYQs from 2021 onwards — GATE Economics was introduced in 2021; pattern consistency is high.
- For NAT questions — practice numerical computation without a calculator initially to build speed.
- Don’t guess on MCQs if you are less than 60% confident — negative marking applies.
- Connect theory to real data — GATE Economics often has application-based questions about India’s economy.
13. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Is there any age limit for GATE Economics?
How many times can I attempt GATE?
What is the difference between GATE XH-C1 and IIT JAM Economics?
Can a B.A. Economics graduate (3-year pass course) apply for GATE?
What is the GATE Economics cutoff for IIT Delhi M.Sc. admission?
Do PSUs recruit through GATE Economics (XH-C1) specifically?
What is the monthly stipend for GATE-qualified students admitted to IIT M.Sc.?
Is Engineering Mathematics included in the GATE Economics paper?
How long is my GATE 2026 score valid?
Can I choose two papers in GATE — can I combine XH with another paper?
14. Conclusion & Next Steps
GATE Economics (XH-C1) is one of the most exciting and underrated competitive exams in India. With less than 3,000 candidates appearing annually (compared to lakhs in engineering papers), the competition is relatively lower — yet the rewards are enormous: IIT pedigree, government fellowships, and a career trajectory that can take you to the RBI, NITI Aayog, World Bank, or top academia.
If you are a B.A./M.A. Economics student or graduate, there is genuinely no better investment of your preparation time than GATE XH-C1. The syllabus aligns closely with your undergraduate curriculum in Economics — all you need is structured preparation, a good strategy, and consistent effort over 4–6 months.
🚀 Ready to Begin Your GATE Economics Journey?
GATE 2027 notification is expected around August 2026. Start your preparation now — 6 months of smart study is all it takes!
🌐 Visit Official GATE Website 📄 Download Economics Syllabus PDF