Special report | Building for the future

India must make much deeper changes if it is to sustain its growth

Improved human capital and a better relationship between the centre and the states will be crucial

An illustration of cogs in the colours of the Indian flag and central cog has spokes like the wheel of the flag.
Illustration: Alberto Miranda
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At the start of the 18th century India was one of the world’s two largest economies, with China the other. Part of that came down to sheer population and, in India’s case, being colonised by the country which led the Industrial Revolution put paid to that. When it achieved independence from Britain in 1947, India made up just 3% of the world economy (adjusted for purchasing power). In 1991, when its great liberalisation started, the figure was 1.1% (at market exchange rates). Today it is 3.6%, spread between 18% of the world’s population.  If it can keep growing at 6% or more, as it has for the past 30 years, then by the time of the modern country’s 100th birthday, it will represent 10% or more of the world economy. And depending on assumptions about growth elsewhere, it could be back in the top rank by the 2070s.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Building for the future”

From the April 27th 2024 edition

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