When India finally achieved its hard-won independence in 1947, it was already the sixth biggest economy on the Planet, sporting an (adjusted) annual GDP of $2.7 billion, but this raw headline figure masked a much more brutal truth. Disparities in relative wealth on the Subcontinent (mostly a legacy of the departing Raj) meant the average Indian’s annual wage on independence had actually fallen to barely 18% of the global benchmark. And things were to get worse over the following decades…by 1990 India had slumped to 12th in the global GDP table, with significantly worsening disparities in relative poverty: at that time (1990) the average Indian worker earned just Rs 7,500 a year, or $966 in today’s money.
This, you might think, was a Nation in decline…but if you thought that, you couldn’t be more wrong. Fast forward thirty-five years, and the IMF has just released a report (The World Economic Outlook (www.imf.org)) which confidently predicts India is on course, over the coming year, to overtake Japan and become the fourth largest economy in the World. According to the same IMF Report, within the next three years, the Subcontinent will also move up a notch to third place in the global economic league to displace Germany, with only the United States and China in its sights.
In the meantime, the IMF predicts the Subcontinent will continue to be the fastest growing large economy on the Planet for at least the next two years, growing by between 6.2% and 6.3% across 2025 and 2026. Compare that with the United States, which has a comparable growth projection of 1.8%, and the United Kingdom, which is still slumbering at 1.6%.
So, how did the Subcontinent get here, and is that level of ferocious growth sustainable?
Well, there are five key reasons for India’s current economic success, so the simple answer to the second of those questions is “YES”, and as to the first:
Small wonder then that the World has been beating a path to India’s door; eager to sign up to new Free Trade Agreements: including countries such as South Korea, Japan, Australia, the UAE and now…as of Tuesday this week, having at long last sloughed off the unhappy hubris and nemesis of Boris Johnson… the United Kingdom too (www.gov.uk/government/news).
What’s not to like? Things can only get better…
Red Ribbon Asset Management (www.redribbon.co) was established more than a decade ago to harness the full potential of India’s fast evolving and emerging markets so as to meet the demands of global communities within a circular economy, whilst at the same time fully recognising the compelling demands of planet people and profit.
Invest in Red Ribbon Asset Management
Red Ribbon Asset Management (www.redribbon.co) aims to harness the full potential of fast evolving and emerging technologies to meet the needs of global communities as part of a circular economy, fully recognising the compelling demands of planet people and profit.