India Economy Thread

But they are claiming to be superpower of the world and think that world revolving around them lol
"The world revolves around India" is a strawman. Nobody said that.

But if India is so irrelevant, why are countries making long-term bets on it?

Take Japan for example. Japan's own METI ministry is backing AISIN's India expansion. They're helping bring production of eAxles, CVTs and automatic transmissions to India and the official project is literally called "Overseas Production Demonstration of Japan-Quality Automatic Transmissions in India." And more importantly, why is Japan's METI personally backing and monitoring the project under its Global South strategy?

Govts don't personally get involved in projects in countries they don't see a future in. Countries don't spend taxpayer money and ministry attention on places they think are irrelevant.
 
There is nothing to wow about. India services boom is about to end. Markets are telling you the future. Now tiny countries like Taiwan, South Korea have higher market cap then India thanks to AI.

Prepare for IMF program in 2030.
Yes it's all doom and gloom for India from now, maybe Pakistan can run coaching classes on how to beg
 

India's productivity gap with China widens despite strong GDP growth: Equirus Securities​

The report noted that while emerging market labour productivity has grown steadily over the past three decades, the current phase is marked by sharp divergence across countries

By ANI​

Updated - June 13, 2026 at 04:13 PM.
| New Delhi

iStock-629863178.jpg


India's labour productivity gap with China has widened by more than $30,000 per worker since 2000, despite decades of strong economic growth, with the country yet to achieve the industry-led productivity transformation seen in economies such as China, South Korea and Vietnam, according to an Equirus Securities research report.

The report, titled "Labour Productivity in Emerging Economies: Catch-up, Innovation, and now AI", said India's GDP per worker has more than tripled since 1995, but productivity gains have lagged behind some of its Asian peers.

"India's productivity gap with China has widened by over USD 30,000 per worker in absolute terms since 2000, despite decades of strong GDP growth. India and Bangladesh today sit at near-identical productivity levels," the report said.

The report noted that while emerging market labour productivity has grown steadily over the past three decades, the current phase is marked by sharp divergence across countries.

It identified Vietnam as the standout performer in the post-pandemic period, driven by manufacturing-led foreign investment, while India continues to face structural constraints.

According to Equirus, India has "not yet executed the industry-led productivity leap that China, Korea, and Vietnam delivered in their high-growth phases."

The report said India's labour productivity growth accelerated to 5.3 per cent annually in the 2000s on the back of the IT and services boom, but slowed to 3.4 per cent in the 2010s due to a series of economic disruptions.

It pointed out that India's productivity performance suffered from "the demonetisation shock (2016), GST implementation disruption (2017), and NBFC liquidity crises" that weighed on the informal economy.

The report also highlighted the severe impact of the pandemic on India's productivity. "India's COVID shock (-12.3 per cent in 2020) was the sharpest in this dataset - a direct consequence of informal sector dependence, migrant labour exposure, and strict lockdowns," it said.

While productivity growth has recovered in recent years, Equirus said the rebound remains uneven because India's most productive sectors account for a relatively small share of employment.

"The services-manufacturing divide means India's headline productivity is highly uneven. If services are stripped out, productivity growth in goods-producing sectors has been far more modest," the report noted.

It said schemes such as the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) programme and the China+1 investment shift are supporting growth in sectors including electronics, pharmaceuticals and auto components.

However, these gains have not yet translated into a structural increase in manufacturing's contribution to the economy.

"The PLI scheme and China+1 FDI thesis are real tailwinds - electronics, pharma, and auto components are showing genuine output gains. But manufacturing's share of GDP has not structurally risen," the report said.

Equirus identified labour market rigidities and high logistics costs as key barriers to stronger productivity growth, noting that logistics costs remain around 13-14 per cent of GDP compared with 8-9 per cent in China.

The report concluded that India's long-term fundamentals remain favourable due to its demographic profile, capital markets, foreign investment inflows and digital infrastructure.

However, it cautioned that sustaining higher productivity growth would require deeper structural reforms beyond capital expenditure and incentive schemes.

"The current administration's focus on capital expenditure and PLI is necessary but not sufficient - transportation costs, commodity pressures, land reforms; would be crucial to push the needle towards a high-productivity story akin to China," it said.
China's productivity isn't great either. Despite 5 decades of growth, its productivity is not even in the top 100 countries. It just has many more workers than anyone else.

 

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