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India is the world’s fifth-largest economy and the fastest-growing major economy. But what does GDP actually tell us, and why should everyday citizens and investors care?
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total monetary value of all finished goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a specific time period (usually a quarter or a year).
GDP is the single most comprehensive measure of a nation’s economic health.
There are three approaches, all theoretically giving the same result:
GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)
| Component | What It Includes | Share of India’s GDP |
|---|---|---|
| C (Consumption) | Household spending on goods and services | ~57% |
| I (Investment) | Business investment in capital goods, construction | ~28% |
| G (Government) | Government spending on infrastructure, defence, subsidies | ~11% |
| X - M (Net Exports) | Exports minus imports | ~(-4%) (India is a net importer) |
Adds up the value created at each stage of production across all sectors:
Adds up all incomes earned: wages, profits, rents, and interest.
When we say “India grew at 6.5%,” we mean real GDP growth — actual increase in goods and services produced, not just price increases.
India’s growth story is fundamentally a consumption story. With 1.4 billion people and a growing middle class, domestic demand is the biggest growth engine. FMCG, retail, automobiles, and real estate benefit directly.
Government capex on infrastructure (roads, railways, metros, airports) and private sector capital expenditure drive this component. The National Infrastructure Pipeline targets ₹111 lakh crore in infrastructure spending.
India’s IT services sector alone contributes over billion in exports. GCCs (Global Capability Centres) are growing rapidly, with India hosting 1,500+ centres for multinational corporations.
There’s a well-known relationship: over the long term, stock market returns roughly track nominal GDP growth.
Market cap to GDP ratio — a rough measure of whether markets are overvalued or undervalued:
India’s ratio has fluctuated between 80-120% in recent years.
| GDP Driver | Beneficiary Sectors |
|---|---|
| Consumption growth | FMCG, Retail, Auto |
| Infrastructure spending | Cement, Steel, Capital Goods, L&T, Railways |
| Urbanisation | Real Estate, Banks, Building Materials |
| Digitalisation | IT Services, Fintech, E-commerce |
| Formalisation | Banks, Insurance, Financial Services |
| Period | Average GDP Growth | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 1991-2000 | 5.8% | Post-liberalisation reforms |
| 2000-2010 | 7.5% | Services boom, globalisation |
| 2010-2020 | 5.7% | Demonetisation, GST transition, COVID |
| 2020-2025 | 6.5% | Post-COVID recovery, capex cycle |
| Country | GDP Growth |
|---|---|
| India | 6.5% |
| China | 4.5% |
| US | 2.0% |
| EU | 1.0% |
| Global | 3.2% |
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