#35 India at $4 Trillion: Rethinking Our Progress
Welcome to the 35th Policy Mandala by India House. This week, we explore what India's booming GDP means for its people and what it is missing. Enjoy reading!
“India has overtaken Japan to become the world’s third-largest economy.”
Fireworks, real and rhetorical, followed this announcement last month. Ministers tweeted. Media headlines boomed. WhatsApp groups churned out fresh memes and patriotic cheers.
We at India House wanted to celebrate too. But we paused. We fact-checked.
And the reality was slightly different.
India is close, but not quite there yet. As of early 2025, our GDP stands at about $3.93 trillion, chasing the $4 trillion mark that would officially rank us third in around a year’s time.
Still, with growth at 7.4 percent last quarter and an annual average near 6.5 percent, we’re undeniably on the move. Construction, manufacturing, and services are growing. Digital infrastructure is deepening. Foreign investors are watching closely. It’s only a matter of time before we cross that milestone.
So yes, the celebration is not misplaced.
But before we get into the GDP ‘party’, we need to pause and ask:
What does this mean for India? For Indians? Who’s getting a slice of this GDP cake, and what’s actually in that slice?
That’s what we’re unpacking in this Policy Mandala. Let’s go!
But, let’s quickly revise: GDP!
GDP, or Gross Domestic Product, is the world’s shorthand for economic power. It adds up the value of all goods and services produced in a country. That includes smartphones from Noida, AI tools from Hyderabad, wheat from Tripura, and coal from Jharkhand.
It’s the metric investors watch, sovereign credit agencies rate, and multilateral lenders use to set borrowing terms. It signals how strong an economy is and how much leverage it holds in global affairs.
It’s an important outcome of both conscious and unconscious policy choices.
Over the past decade, India has tripled infrastructure spending and rolled out Production Linked Incentive schemes that together sparked nearly ₹2 lakh crore in new investments. India drew over $80 billion in foreign capital last year alone, as global funds rushed to buy Indian government bonds and this also got included in JP Morgan’s Emerging Market Bond Index.
What’s driving this momentum?
Massive public investment in roads, rail, and energy creates jobs and builds long-lasting assets. PLI schemes pulling in fresh capital. And a 350-million-strong middle class that powers a significant percent of GDP through demand for housing, mobility, and digital services.
It’s no surprise that India is now the fastest-growing major economy, expanding around 6 to 7 percent even in a shaky global environment.
There’s no question that GDP growth matters. It gives us credibility, invites investors, and secures a seat at global tables. But GDP also hides as much as it reveals. It tells us how big the economy is, but not exactly how well people are doing.
Look at jobs. Urban youth unemployment sits near 18 percent. Only 12 percent of college graduates find formal jobs within a year. Most new work is informal, without contracts, health coverage, or paid leave. About 91% of India’s workforce of 5.2 crore is informal, who lack basic social insurance.
Per capita income, i.e. the average income per person, stands around ₹2.5 lakh a year. That places us roughly 110th globally when adjusted for prices. So while the economy grows, many Indians still hustle just to stay afloat.
Then there’s the work GDP doesn’t see at all.
Across millions of homes, women wake before dawn, cook, fetch water, care for elders, help with homework, clean, manage illnesses, and often still contribute to family incomes through farms or home-based businesses. This unpaid care work keeps households running. In truth, it underpins India’s largest social security system: the family.
But since no money changes hands, none of it shows up in GDP. Estimates suggest that unpaid care and domestic work add over ₹22 lakh crore in value every year, more than the entire national education budget. Yet because it’s not counted, it rarely becomes a priority in policy. If we measured it properly, we might see stronger investment in childcare centres, maternity support, or rural infrastructure that eases household burdens.
Instead, this massive contribution remains invisible. It doesn’t show up in our national accounts, so it doesn’t shape how we plan.
GDP also misses something else: the costs of climate damage.
According to a recent CEEW Study, 3/4th of Indian population is at 'high' to 'very high' heat risk. In 2024 alone, crop yields in Punjab and Haryana dropped 10 percent. Delhi’s air quality stayed hazardous for nearly three months, halting outdoor work and construction. Chennai has lost ₹20,000 crore to floods in 2015 and continues to lose in every subsequent flood since.
These aren’t rare events anymore. They’re becoming annual shocks that disrupt labor, logistics, and livelihoods.
Ironically, rebuilding after floods, buying more air purifiers, or treating pollution-triggered illnesses can all push GDP higher. Economic activity rises, even when people’s well-being sinks. That’s the blunt truth: GDP measures transactions, not human flourishing.
So how are we really doing?
India ranks 132 out of 191 on the Human Development Index, with an HDI score of 0.645. About 19 crore Indians still live with multidimensional poverty, lacking health, education, or decent living standards, even though 24 crore came out of it over the last decade.
It’s a messy reality. The economy is growing. Lives are improving. Yet too many are still left behind.
This is the classic policy paradox: better, but still bad.
Other countries have started asking deeper questions about what progress should look like.
Bhutan measures Gross National Happiness. New Zealand uses a Wellbeing Budget that directs money based on social outcomes, not just sectors. Scotland has a dashboard of 81 indicators that guide public planning, tracking everything from mental health to ecological resilience.
These aren’t casual experiments. They’re serious attempts to put human well-being on par with economic growth.
So why does GDP still dominate?
Because it’s simple. Because it’s familiar. Because it makes for powerful headlines and is easy for global markets to digest. “India at $4 trillion” sounds compelling. “Multidimensional poverty fell by 1.5 percent” doesn’t have the same ring. Metrics like HDI or the Social Progress Index lack glamour and often don’t influence trade deals or big loans. So GDP stays at the top.
But this obsession comes at a cost. When GDP becomes our only compass, we overlook the millions of lives hidden behind averages.
So what could India do differently?
First, focus less on aggregate GDP and more on GDP per capita and median income. GDP per capita shows roughly what each person’s share would be. Median income reveals what the typical Indian earns. Together, they cut through the illusion of sheer size.
Second, lead the way in building a GDP-plus framework that reflects India’s unique context. This means valuing unpaid care work, household savings, and informal sector contributions that sustain the economy but stay invisible. It wouldn’t replace GDP, but would sit alongside it, giving a more honest picture of how we’re doing.
Third, be transparent about trade-offs. India has rightly focused on macro stability, low inflation, and big infrastructure spending. This strategy has brought credibility and steadiness. But it’s also meant slower wage growth in rural areas and fewer new jobs. These are deliberate choices that deserve debate by all of us.
Fourth, stay committed to growing beyond services. PLI schemes are a start, but manufacturing still makes up only about 15 percent of GDP. Unlocking more here means making it easier for MSMEs to scale, for private investors to take risks, and for research and development to thrive. That’s how we build resilience and real industrial heft. And there is a lot of work that needs to be done on this front.
So yes, let’s celebrate India approaching $4 trillion. It reflects resilience, reform momentum, and growing clout in the global economy. That’s worth a genuine round of applause.
But let’s also stay clear-eyed. GDP tells us how big the economy is. It doesn’t tell us how fair, healthy, or hopeful it is.
That’s the kind of progress we should aim for. And that’s the kind of India Policy Mandala will keep rooting for.
See you next week.
The team behind Policy Mandala has launched a 4-month policy program for professionals, the Policy Pioneers Program, in collaboration with IIM Raipur and the Public Systems Lab at IIT Delhi.
Know more about it here.
Book Mandala
In this section, we suggest a book to be read/listened to each week, for the inner policy enthusiast in you :)
Book: GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History
Author: Diane Coyle
About the Book:
Diane Coyle, a leading economist and former adviser to the UK Treasury, offers a concise yet compelling history of one of the world’s most quoted — and misunderstood — numbers: GDP. Tracing its origins from the Great Depression to its central role in modern policymaking, Coyle explains how GDP came to dominate economic thinking, what it leaves out, and why that matters. With clarity and wit, she walks readers through the metric's evolution, its role in global politics, and the urgent debate over what we should be measuring instead in the 21st century.
Our Take:
This is the kind of book we at Policy Mandala love — crisp, insightful, and deeply relevant to how we think about growth. Coyle strikes a rare balance between economic rigour and accessibility, making it a great read for policy nerds, students, and curious citizens alike.
As India inches toward the $4 trillion mark and we reflect on what that number actually tells us (or doesn’t), this book offers critical context. It doesn’t preach, it invites you to rethink.
Co-authored by Meenakshi Singh and Aswathi Prakash.
Hope you liked today’s Policy Mandala!
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Easy to understand and remember. Thank you.