### Summary
India's economy is growing rapidly and is projected to become the third largest economy by 2031. However, there is a significant disparity in per capita income among states, with some states significantly behind the national average.
### Facts
- India is the fastest-growing large economy globally and is driving cost competitiveness.
- India's middle class is estimated to reach 61% of the population with an average income of Rs 20 lakh.
- By 2031, India's GDP is expected to cross the $10 trillion mark.
- Per capita income in India has increased from Rs 90,688 in 2013 to Rs 196,983 in April 2023.
- Telangana, Karnataka, and Haryana have the highest per capita income, while Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Jharkhand have the lowest.
- The per capita income of Bihar is 17% of Telangana and one-fourth of the national average.
- There is a correlation between political stability and economic performance.
- India's per capita income ranks 141st out of 191 countries.
- India needs to shift its population from low-productivity sectors like agriculture to high-income domains and increase female workforce participation.
- The necessary interventions include investment in human infrastructure, agricultural advancements, climate resilience, land and labor reforms, planned urbanization, and more.
India's economic growth likely accelerated to 7.7% in the April-June quarter, driven by strong service sector growth, high demand, and increased government capital expenditure, according to a Reuters poll.
India's economy is experiencing consistent growth, and is predicted to become the fourth-largest economy within 18 months and the third-largest by 2028, driven by strong fundamentals and infrastructure development, while successfully reducing poverty; however, further reforms in areas such as patents, judicial, administrative, and process reforms are needed to boost economic growth.
India's economy grew at its fastest pace in a year in the April-June quarter, driven by services and manufacturing, though economists warn of a slowdown ahead due to factors like rising food prices and slowing global growth.
India's GDP grew at a rate of 7.8% in the April-June period, fueled by a strong services sector and government infrastructure spending.
India's GDP growth reached a four-quarter high of 7.8% in Q1FY24, with private consumption and services picking up pace, but challenges lie ahead with the sustainability of services growth and concerns over the monsoon and agriculture sector.
India's services industry experienced a slight slowdown in August, but overall conditions remained strong with record-high exports, indicating that the country will continue to be the fastest-growing major economy.
India's economic rise is seen as inevitable due to factors such as a consumer boom, context-appropriate innovation, a green transition, a demographic dividend, access to finance, major infrastructure upgrades, policy reforms, geopolitical positioning, and a diaspora dividend, although challenges such as unbalanced growth, unrealized demographic potential, and unrealized ease-of-business and innovation potential still need to be addressed.
India's industrial output rose 5.7% in July, its fastest pace in five months, driven by strong mining and electricity activity, but high inflation and slowing pent-up demand may hinder future growth.
India's aluminium sector is thriving due to government infrastructure growth and increasing industry demand, with expectations for India to become the world's second biggest aluminium consumer as its per capita consumption remains low.
India's GDP growth is expected to moderate over the next few quarters, with a projected growth rate of around 7% in the second quarter and a slowdown to around 4.5-5% in the second half of the year. Factors such as the fluctuating monsoon, lower reservoir levels, cautious rural demand, and the impact of monetary tightening are likely to contribute to this moderation in growth. The writer predicts a full-year GDP expansion of 6%, with future growth depending on factors such as the outcome of the next election.
India's economy needs to grow at a rate of 8% per year and focus on investment in traditional sectors in order to surpass China as the largest contributor to the global economy, according to Barclays.