Noting that to make India’s “$5 trillion economy” a short-term “aspirational goal,” former RBI Governor C Rangarajan said despite achieving this target, India will still be known as a middle-income country with a per capita income of $3472.
“The immediate focus of policymakers must be to raise the growth rate of the economy. Achievement of a $5 trillion economy is a good short-term aspirational goal. This will take a minimum of five years of sustained growth of 9%. Even then, at the end of it, India’s per capita income will be only $3472 and we will still be classified as a lower middle-income country,” the former chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister noted.
Speaking at the 12th Convocation of ICFAI Foundation for Higher education in Hyderabad, he said to reach the level of an upper middle-income country, will take another two years. And, in order to be classified as a developed country, the per capita income of India will have to be at a minimum of $13,205 and that will take more than two decades of strong growth of between 8 to 9% to achieve it.
Rangarajan said at the aggregate output level, India is the fifth largest economy in the world now. That by itself is an impressive achievement. But in terms of per capita income, India’s rank according to IMF is 142 out of 197 countries.
Post Covid-19 and post the Russia–Ukraine war, there is a need to lay down a clear roadmap for India’s future development, he said. Initially, there is a need to raise the growth rate to 7% and then follow it up with a growth rate of 8-9% which is possible and India has shown in the past it can have that kind of growth rate over a sustained period of six to seven years, Rangarajan added.
Recently, a Swiss brokerage said that India is growing faster than what is captured by the country’s official data. Upgrading Indian equities to ‘benchmark’ from ‘underweight’, Credit Suisse said there is a scope for a growth of up to 14% on the benchmark indices.
The brokerage firm’s head of research Neelkanth Mishra said the country will grow at 7% in FY24, as against the consensus estimates which peg the real growth to slip below 6%.
Mishra said the growth in dense fuels — which is typically below the real GDP growth as fuel efficiencies go up — is over 4% per annum for the last three years.