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Nithin Kamath highlights India's rise to the fourth-largest economy but warns that GDP figures alone overlook crucial issues ...
leaving behind the US and China. However, the IMF is not the only entity projecting an upward graph for India. Earlier, the World Bank has shown optimism regarding the resilience of India's economy.
But don't underestimate India and its future opportunities for business. The country has been growing impressively in the last two decades, now faster than China in GDP percentage terms.
India has a young, vast work force that is expanding as China’s ages and shrinks. But the country’s immense size also lays bare its enormous challenges. By Mujib Mashal and Alex Travelli ...
Just look at the data, they say. At its independence in 1947, India’s GDP per head was higher than China’s (on a purchasing-power basis). But by the early 1990s, China had moved ahead on that ...
Back in 1980, India and China were roughly equal when it came to earning money. Both nations’ GDP per capita — or, more casually speaking, their average income per resident — was around $300 ...
Our partner, Oxford Economics, expects that China’s government budget deficit as a percentage of GDP will surpass India’s in the future. This shift could have implications for each country’s ...