Is India the world’s fourth largest economy?
Context
- GDP Definition: GDP (Gross Domestic Product) measures the total value of goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a given time.
- Limitations of GDP:
- Fails to reflect health, education, or income inequality.
- Ignores non-market contributions like unpaid domestic work, especially by women.
- Doesn’t capture socio-economic indicators or informal sector dynamics.
- Call for Reform:
- Economists and global institutions have demanded reforms in national accounting systems.
- GDP dominance in policy discourse persists despite limitations.
On determining the GDP
- Standardization: GDP methodology is largely standardized internationally, but data quality varies.
- Currency Conversion: To compare GDPs globally, values are converted into a common currency, usually the US dollar.
- Exchange Rate Method:
- Conversion using market exchange rates: g., $1 = ₹85.69 (as per article).
- Based on this method, India ranked 5th from 2021, and will be 4th in 2025, as per IMF projections.
- Limitations:
- Volatile exchange rates hinder stable temporal comparisons.
- Effective for current account transactions (e.g., exports, remittances).
- Not suited for comparing domestic consumption or standards of living.
The PPP comparison
- Definition: PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) adjusts for price level differences across countries by comparing the cost of a standard “basket of goods.”
- PPP vs. Market Exchange:
- S. GDP is 7.5 times India’s at market rates; only 1.8 times at PPP rates.
- India became the third-largest economy by PPP in 2009 and has retained that rank since.
- Examples: Price differences in goods/services: g., a Big Mac or haircut cheaper in Mumbai than New York. Non-traded goods (e.g., rent, services) are cheaper in developing countries.
- Critique: The government highlights GDP rank based on market exchange rates for political narrative.
- PPP adjustments reveal the illusion of economic parity, masking underdevelopment.
Improving the comparisons
- PPP Adjustments & Illusions: PPP inflates GDP for poorer countries due to lower wages and prices. Example: India’s GDP at PPP = $15 trillion, triple its market-exchange GDP.
- Labour Data:
o ILO India Employment Report 2024: 76% of casual agricultural workers & 70% in construction earn below minimum wage.
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- Large informal sector, low productivity, unpaid work by women.
- Per Capita GDP: In 2024, India’s per capita GDP = $2,711, ranked 144th (market exchange), 127th (PPP).
o Comparison: Vietnam: $4,536; Sri Lanka: $4,325; Bhutan: $3,913. India in 1991 was ahead of Vietnam, but has since fallen behind.
Conclusion:
- India’s large aggregate GDP hides real economic The “big economy illusion”: large GDP ≠ development or improved well-being.
- True development should be measured via composite indicators: life expectancy, education, quality of employment, income distribution.





