Why in the News?
India’s GDP surged 8.2% to ₹48.63 lakh crore, reflecting strong economic momentum. However, the IMF’s ‘Grade C’ rating warns of structural weaknesses that threaten long-term growth amid global volatility and internal challenges.
The General State of the Economy
India’s latest GDP numbers indicate that the economy is operating at a significantly higher level than last year. The 8.2% rise highlights genuine economic momentum rather than a mere post-pandemic recovery.
- Manufacturing (9.1% growth): Reflects strong industrial demand, rising factory utilisation, and healthy production cycles.
- Services (60% of GDP, growing at 9.2%): Led by financial services growing at 10.2%, driven by robust credit activity and high transaction volumes.
- Gross Value Added (GVA) increase: From ₹82.88 lakh crore to ₹89.41 lakh crore confirms rising real economic activity, not just inflationary effects.
Inflation remained under control as nominal GDP increased only 8.8%, indicating that growth was largely real. Household spending also strengthened, with PFCE rising 7.9%. Agriculture grew 3.5%, supported by fuller reservoirs and horticulture improvements.
The external sector contributed through a small current account deficit, stable services exports, and healthy forex buffers that cushioned global volatility.
The IMF’s ‘Grade C’ Rating
Despite positive numbers, the IMF assigned India a Grade C rating in national income accounting, pointing toward methodological and structural issues. The concerns include:
- Outdated base year (2011–12)
- Inadequate wholesale price data
- Missing producer price indices
- Possible cyclical biases from single deflators
- Discrepancies in production and expenditure approaches
- Incomplete coverage of informal sector activity
- Lack of consolidated data from States after 2019
These shortcomings create room for underrating or overrating actual growth, complicating economic analysis.
The Credibility Question
The RBI’s Annual Report (2024-25) notes that while the economy has performed well, structural constraints continue to drag India’s credibility, including:
- Weak institutional capacity at State level
- Low labour productivity
- A mismatch between export profile and global demand
India may show strong quarterly GDP growth, but its long-term economic framework is still developing.
Additionally:
- Mining barely grew (0.04%) due to an unusually long monsoon.
- Electricity/utilities grew only 4.4%. These sectors together employ millions but contribute little to GDP, signalling uneven recovery.
Structural Vulnerabilities
The RBI cautions that India’s export trajectory faces several headwinds:
- Rising global protectionism
- Tariff uncertainties
- Geopolitical tensions in key markets
Services exports and remittances remain strong but cannot replace a diversified, high-value export base, which India still lacks.
Another contradiction appears in the financial markets: the rupee looked stable, but this stability was driven by a strong dollar and foreign capital movements, not domestic resilience.
Thus, India’s strong GDP numbers do not fully reflect governance quality, institutional depth, or structural health—factors the IMF emphasises.
Broad-Sector Concerns
Despite Q2 strength:
- Agriculture grew only 3.5%
- Utilities at 4.4%
- Mining just above zero
These sectors employ a large share of the workforce but generate low productivity and limited value addition, slowing overall structural transformation.
Conclusion
India’s 8.2% GDP growth is a major achievement and signals strong economic momentum.
However, the IMF’s Grade C serves as a subtle but important reminder:
- Short-term numbers look robust
- But long-term structural issues in governance, labour productivity, institutional capacity, and exports remain unresolved
India is growing fast—but sustaining this growth requires deep structural reforms.
Source: Is India’s 8.2% growth rate sustainable? – The Hindu
UPSC CSE PYQ
| Year | PYQ |
| 2019 | Do you agree with the view that steady GDP growth and low inflation have left the Indian economy in good shape? Give reasons in support of your arguments. |
| 2020 | Define potential GDP and explain its determinants. What are the factors that have been inhibiting India from realizing its potential GDP? |
| 2021 | Do you agree that the Indian economy has recently experienced V-shaped recovery? Give reasons in support of your answer. |
| 2023 | Faster economic growth requires increased share of the manufacturing sector in GDP, particularly of MSMEs. Comment on the present policies of the Government in this regard. |