Finance and economics | Beyond GDP

How fast is India’s economy really growing?

Statisticians take the country’s figures with a pinch of salt

Workers at the construction site of Dixon Technologies Ltd.'s new factory, in Noida, India
Photograph: Getty Images
|Mumbai

Optimism about India tends to spike now and again. In 1996, a few years after the country opened to foreign capital, the price of property in Mumbai, India’s financial hub, soared to the highest of any global city, according to one account. In 2007 the country’s economy grew at an annual rate of 9%, leading many to speculate that it might hit double digits. Yet after each of these booms, hopes were dashed. The late-2000s surge made way for financial turbulence in the 2010s.

Today India again appears to be at the start of an upswing. In the year to the fourth quarter of 2023, GDP growth roared at 8.4%. But such figures tend to be treated with a pinch of salt. Economists inside and outside the government are debating just how fast the economy is growing—a question that has particular piquancy ahead of a general election that begins on April 19th. So what is India’s actual growth rate? And is the economy accelerating?

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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Getting the right frame"

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