Unit 4 Macro: Focus on India - Economic Growth
Recommend on Google+
This is the first of a short series of blogs focusing on economic growth and development in the Indian economy, Our first blog provides some background data and study videos on India.
Sustained growth and development
India has sustained rapid growth of real GDP for the last two decades leading to rising per capita incomes and a reduction in absolute poverty. Per capita incomes have doubled in 12 years.
The annual pace of expansion in real GDP for India averages over seven per cent and using the Rule of 72, this is sufficient for India’s GDP to double in size every 10 and a half years. India has a high trend rate of growth and the extract refers to India’s supply-side advantages
GDP growth (annual %), India from Timetric
But India has one third of all the people in the world living below the official global poverty line. It has more poor people than in the whole of sub-Saharan Africa
By way of comparison, India’s per capita income is 1/20th that of the UK
GDP per capita, PPP (constant 2005 international $), India from Timetric
India appears to have recovered quickly from the global financial crisis. The government and the Reserve Bank of India acted quickly to boost demand during the crisis because their economy is much more dependent than say China on domestic sources of demand rather than exports.
Despite a strong attempt to become an open economy, exports of goods and services from India account for only 15% of GDP although this is set to rise further in the years ahead
Exports of goods and services (% of GDP), India from Timetric
India has followed a different path of development from many other countries. India went more quickly from agriculture to services that tend to be less tightly regulated than heavy industry. That said there are some emerging manufacturing giants in the Indian economy many of which are achieving increasing prominence on a global scale. An increasing proportion of India exports are sourced from high-technology businesses and industries as India seeks to build and then benefit from new competitive advantages in high knowledge industries.
High-technology exports (% of manufactured exports), India from Timetric
blog comments powered by Disqus
ECONOMICS TEACHER RESOURCE NEWSLETTER
Join over 6,000 other Economics Teachers in the UK and around the world who receive the tutor2u regular Economics Resource Email Newsletter. Get special offers, first news of latest resources, teaching ideas, conferences and workshops + loads of great ideas for teaching economics from our blog authors.





