India can do better than what it is doing. China is a good example for that comparison. India has pulled quite far ahead of Pakistan and has gained a fair amount of momentum too which takes time to build.
@Master Chief you seem to be arguing against any real differences in both the economies. There seems to be an attempt to play down Indian progress in this regard.
I asked ChatGPT, which has come out with the following summary for both the nations considering GDP as well as GNI.
“1. GDP per Capita (Average economic output per person)
GDP per capita = total GDP divided by the population
It shows how much economic output each person would get on average.

India (2025 estimates)
• Nominal GDP per capita: ~ $2,878 (current USD) according to IMF. 
• GDP per capita (PPP): ~ $12,132 (international dollars, PPP) — higher due to lower cost of living in India. 

Pakistan (2024 estimates)
(Most recent available data)
• Nominal GDP per capita: ~ $1,485 (current USD). 
• GDP per capita (PPP): ~ $6,287 (international dollars). 

Comparison:
• India’s nominal GDP per capita is almost 1.9-2× that of Pakistan’s. 
• On a PPP basis, India’s measure is still significantly higher (reflecting greater real income adjusted for cost of living). 
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2. GNI per Capita (Average income of residents)
GNI per capita = Gross National Income ÷ population
Includes income earned by residents abroad and excludes income earned by foreigners.

India
• Atlas method (GNI per capita): ~ $2,650 USD (2024). 
This is an official World Bank measure using the Atlas method. 
• PPP GNI per capita: Data isn’t always directly available from the same source, but PPP adjustments show much higher relative income; for example, other indicators show India’s GNI per capita PPP around ~$11,000 in 2024. 

Pakistan
• PPP GDP per capita frequently used as a proxy for GNI per capita PPP: ~ $6,287 in 2024. 
(Official World Bank data for Pakistan’s nominal GNI per capita specifically is less current in open sources but generally lower than India’s Atlas figure.)

Comparison:
• India’s nominal GNI per capita (~$2,650) is clearly higher than Pakistan’s nominal income per person. 
• In PPP terms, average income adjusted for cost of living remains higher in India than in Pakistan, though the PPP gap (like GDP PPP per capita) is narrower than in nominal terms. “
I do think that the Indian figures are so much higher than Pakistan and anything to gloat about. Since, the number of poor, malnourished, jobless etc can be found galore in India and we are nowhere near, where we should have been.
At the same time Pakistanis need to start accepting the fact that they are missing the bus everyday. I don’t see any radical economic reforms taking place in Pakistan that can propel your economy the way it is required to be done.