Reimagining India: Unlocking the Potential of Asia’s Next Superpower (50 page)

A REMARKABLE RISE

1991 GLOBAL RANKING

BY PPP-ADJUSTED GDP ($ BILLION)

When India started reforms in 1991, the size of its economy was comparable to those of much smaller countries.

AN ENIGMATIC ECONOMY

The rise of India’s information technology and outsourcing sectors is a familiar story. But while India is a technology titan, it’s also an agrarian country where wealth comes from energy and natural resources.

Since economic liberalization began in 1991, India has experienced strong growth on the way to becoming one of the world’s largest economies.

2013 GLOBAL RANKING

BY PPP-ADJUSTED GDP ($ BILLION)

AGRICULTURE

SHARE OF TOTAL EMPLOYMENT: 53%

Agriculture is still what the vast majority of Indians do for a living, but it also counts for a shrinking share of the country’s economic activity. Indian farmers must become more productive to feed a growing population and compete in export markets.

SHARE OF GDP

1990

2012

29%

18%

SERVICES

SHARE OF TOTAL EMPLOYMENT: 21%

The technology sector is a symbol of India’s economic progress. But the combined workforces of the ten biggest IT firms total less than half the number of jobs at government-owned Indian Railways, the country’s largest employer.

SHARE OF GDP

1990

2012

44%

56%

INDUSTRY

SHARE OF TOTAL EMPLOYMENT: 19%

Manufacturers rank among India’s most profitable companies and industry has the potential to create great wealth and new jobs, but India hasn’t yet realized its potential as a place that makes things.

SHARE OF GDP

1990

2012

26%

27%

Sources: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, October 2012

PROSPERITY AND INEQUALITY

Indians and foreigners alike often presume that the country’s cultural fault line is between the impoverished, struggling north and the rapidly developing south. But economic and population data shows that levels of development vary widely across the country and within regions.

In the past decade, the population of India’s north and east has grown faster than that of the south and west. Typically, slowing population growth goes hand-in-hand with rising levels of income and urbanization.

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