India to become upper middle-income country by 2031; to grow at 6.8% in FY25: CRISIL

Updated : Mar 06, 2024 14:31
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Editorji News Desk

CRISIL Ratings on Wednesday has projected India's GDP growth at 6.8% for the fiscal year 2025 while saying that the country will become an upper middle-income nation by 2031. This prediction comes as it expects the country's economy to inch closer to $7 trillion by 2031.

CRISIL on Indian economy

The report further mentioned that India can become the third largest economy by 2031 with the support from domestic structural reforms and cyclical levers. 

"After a better-than-expected 7.6% this fiscal, India's real GDP growth will likely moderate to 6.8% in fiscal 2025," said the Crisil India Outlook report. 

It said that the next seven fiscals (2025-2031) will see the Indian economy crossing the USD 5 trillion-mark and inching closer to USD 7 trillion. Crisil expects the economy to expand to USD 6.7 trillion by fiscal 2031.

"A projected average expansion of 6.7% in this period will make India the third-largest economy in the world and lift per capita income to the upper-middle income category by 2031," Crisil said.

Also Read: Moody's raises India's 2024 GDP growth estimate to 6.8% from earlier forecast of 6.1%

India, with a GDP size of USD 3.6 trillion, is currently the fifth largest economy in the world, after the US, China, Japan and Germany.

"By fiscal 2031, India will be the No. 3 economy and an upper-middle income country, which will be a big positive for domestic consumption", said CRISIL Managing Director and CEO Amish Mehta

Upper middle-income country

The report further mentioned that the per capita income in India will increase to $4,500 by 2031. As per World Bank's definition, the countries with per capita income of $1,000-$4,000 are lower-middle income countries, and upper-middle income countries are those with per capita income between USD 4,000-12,000.

India's manufacturing sector is at a sweet spot due to high capacity utilisation across key sectors, opportunities from global supply-chain diversification, thrust on infrastructure investment, the green-transition imperative and strong balance sheets of lenders.

"Continuous reforms, enhanced global competitiveness and moving up the value chain will boost the share of manufacturing in India's GDP beyond the projected 20% in fiscal 2031," Mehta said.

Crisil report said near- and medium-term challenges to growth outlook would come from geopolitics, slowing potential growth from an uneven global recovery, climate change and technological disruptions.

The report said the near term will be characterised by fiscal consolidation, with the gradually receding role of government capex and expectations of the baton being taken up by the the private sector.

Emerging sectors, which are growing faster than others, are electronics, EV, and energy transition-intensive and they account for 16% of the incremental capex in fiscals 2023 and 2024.

Through fiscal 2031, both cylinders of the economy -- manufacturing and services -- will fire, yielding a sturdier growth path.

Crisil Chief Economist Dharmakirti Joshi said there is ample opportunity for both manufacturing and services to cater to domestic and global demand.

"We project manufacturing and services to grow 9.1% and 6.9%, respectively, between fiscals 2025 and 2031. Despite some growth catch-up by manufacturing, services will remain the dominant driver of India's growth," Joshi said.

GDP

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