Economic Growth and Development

Why in News: India’s economy registered 7.8% real GDP growth in Q1 of FY 2025-26 (a five-quarter high), prompting global agencies like S&P Global to upgrade India’s sovereign rating for the first time in 18 years.

Introduction

  • Indian civilisation has long emphasised that turbulence precedes triumph, much like the Samudra Manthan that yielded nectar. 
  • India’s economic journey mirrors this philosophy: the 1991 crisis produced liberalisation, the COVID-19 pandemic spurred digital adoption, and today, despite skepticism, India demonstrates resilience, rapid growth, and inclusive development.

Current Growth Trajectory

High Growth Performance:

  • Real GDP grew 7.8% in Q1 FY 2025-26, a five-quarter high.
  • Broad-based growth: Manufacturing (7.7%), Construction (7.6%), Services (~9.3%).
  • Nominal GDP: 8.8% growth.

Global Standing:

  • 4th largest economy, fastest growing major economy.
  • On track to overtake Germany as the 3rd largest economy by market exchange before decade end.
  • Contributes 15% of incremental world growth; target of 20%.

Investor Confidence:

  • S&P Global rating upgrade (first in 18 years) citing robust growth, monetary credibility, and fiscal consolidation.
  • Lowers borrowing costs, widens investor base.

Inclusive Development 

Poverty Alleviation:

  • 24.82 crore people moved out of multidimensional poverty (2013–14 to 2022–23).

Foundational Services Delivered at Scale:

  • Bank accounts (Jan Dhan Yojana).
  • LPG connections (Ujjwala).
  • Health coverage (Ayushman Bharat).
  • Tap water (Jal Jeevan Mission).
  • Direct Benefit Transfers empowering poor.

Model of Development:

  • Consensus-building & cooperative federalism.
  • Digital public infrastructure for last-mile delivery.
  • Slow to announce, fast to implement → sustainable growth.

Energy Security as a Growth Backbone

Current Status:

  • 3rd largest energy consumer, 4th largest refiner, 4th largest LNG importer.
  • Refining capacity: 5.2 mbpd, roadmap to expand beyond 400 MTPA by 2030.

Exploration & Reforms:

  • Acreage expanded to 16% of sedimentary basins (2025); target 1 million sq. km by 2030.
  • 99% reduction in ‘No-Go’ areas.
  • Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP) → transparent bidding.
  • Gas pricing linked to Indian crude basket, 20% premium for deepwater blocks.

Energy Transition Measures

Biofuels:

  • Ethanol blending: 1.5% (2014) → 20% (2025).
  • Compressed Biogas: 300+ plants under SATAT scheme; 5% blending mandate by 2028.
  • Green Hydrogen: Oil PSUs investing heavily, aligning with global climate commitments.

India’s Role in Global Oil Markets

  • Russian Crude Purchases:
  • Within G7/EU price cap system.
  • Legal, audited, compliant transactions.
  • Helped stabilise global markets, prevented $200/barrel oil shock.

Domestic Shielding Measures:

  • Oil PSUs absorbed losses up to ₹10/litre on diesel.
  • Tax cuts, export conditions ensured domestic supply & stable retail prices.

Structural Drivers of Transformation

Industrial & Manufacturing Push:

  • Semiconductors, defence, renewables, electronics.
  • PLI schemes + Pradhan Mantri Gati Shakti improving logistics.
  • Japan-India semiconductor collaboration.

Digital Economy:

  • UPI → global leader in real-time payments.
  • Digital public infrastructure lowers friction, formalises economy.
  • Start-up ecosystem → exports of innovation & services.

Future Outlook

  • EY Projection: India to be 2nd largest economy in PPP terms by 2038 (GDP $34 trillion+).

Growth Pillars:

  • Continued structural reforms.
  • Human capital development.
  • Abundant, clean, reliable energy.

Civilisational Resilience: From Green Revolution to IT Revolution, India has historically turned crises into opportunities.

Challenges Ahead

  • Rising inequality amid rapid growth.
  • Need for skilling to harness demographic dividend.
  • Balancing energy security with climate commitments.
  • Managing urbanisation and regional disparities.

Conclusion

India’s economic churn reflects the civilisational lesson that turbulence yields nectar. From crisis has come renewal — poverty reduction, digital adoption, energy transition, and resilient growth. 

GS Paper III:

  • Indian Economy and issues relating to growth, development, and planning.

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