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National Income | EconTweets
๐Ÿ“– Chapter 3 ยท Indian Economy
๐Ÿ“š Indian Economy for Competitive Exams ยท EconTweets Series

National Income

The complete guide โ€” concepts, aggregates, three methods of measurement, India’s latest data, and every exam-critical formula in one place.

๐ŸŸก Beginnerโ€“Intermediate โฑ๏ธ ~35 min read ๐Ÿ“ 12-Question Quiz ๐Ÿ“Š 4 Live Charts ๐Ÿ† Leaderboard

๐ŸŽฏ Relevant For: UPSC CSERBI Grade BNABARD Grade ASEBIState PSCCUET PGUGC NETIESIIT JAM

๐ŸŽฏ What You Will Learn

  • Define National Income and related aggregates
  • Build the GDP โ†’ GNP โ†’ NNP โ†’ NI โ†’ PI โ†’ DPI chain
  • Explain all three methods of measuring national income
  • Distinguish Real vs. Nominal GDP and GDP deflator
  • Understand GVA, its sectors and relationship to GDP
  • Explain per capita income and its limitations
  • Recall India’s latest national income data (MoSPI 2026)
  • Identify limitations of GDP as a welfare measure
๐Ÿช Why Does National Income Matter?

How do we know India is richer today than it was 30 years ago? How does the government decide how much to spend on roads, hospitals, and schools? How does the RBI decide whether to cut interest rates? The answer to all of these is one powerful number: National Income.

National Income is the economic report card of a nation โ€” a single aggregated measure of all the productive activity happening across 1.4 billion people, millions of firms, and countless markets. Getting this number right โ€” and understanding what it means โ€” is the foundation of all macroeconomic analysis.

๐Ÿ’ก India’s Nominal GDP for FY 2025-26 is estimated at โ‚น345.47 lakh crore (~$4.1 trillion) โ€” the 4th largest economy in the world. Every rupee in this number comes from applying the concepts in this chapter. (Source: MoSPI, Feb 2026)
1

Core Concepts โ€” What Is National Income?

Let’s build this up from first principles. An economy consists of households, firms, the government, and the foreign sector โ€” all interacting, producing goods and services, earning income, and spending. National Income is the total monetary value of all final goods and services produced by the residents of a country in a given year.

๐Ÿ“Œ National Income โ€” Marshall’s Definition

“The labour and capital of a country acting on its natural resources produce annually a certain net aggregate of commodities, material and immaterial, including services of all kinds. This is the true net annual income or revenue of the country or National Income.” โ€” Alfred Marshall

๐Ÿ“Œ National Income โ€” Pigou’s Definition

National Income is “that part of the objective income of the community, including of course income derived from abroad, which can be measured in money.” โ€” A.C. Pigou. Key word: measurable in money.

โš ๏ธ Three Key Precautions โ€” What to Include and Exclude

Table 3.1 โ€” What is included and excluded in National Income (very frequently tested)
CategoryIncluded โœ…Excluded โŒ
Goods & ServicesOnly final goods (sold to end users) to avoid double countingIntermediate goods (raw materials, semi-finished goods used in production)
Time PeriodOnly current year production (flow concept)Past production / second-hand goods (e.g., resale of old car)
Productive ActivityAll market transactions with monetary valueNon-market activities: household work, barter, black economy, voluntary services
Transfer PaymentsNOT included (they are not production)Pensions, scholarships, unemployment allowance, gifts โ€” no production involved
Illegal ActivitiesFormally excluded (difficult to measure)Drug trade, smuggling, corruption โ€” not included in official estimates
Windfall GainsNot includedLottery, gambling, capital gains on existing assets โ€” no new production
๐ŸŽฏ Exam Alert โ€” Double Counting Problem

The most critical problem in measuring national income is double counting โ€” counting the same value multiple times. To avoid it, we count only final goods (products sold to end users) OR use the value-added method (counting only the extra value added at each stage). Example: if wheat = โ‚น10, flour = โ‚น15 (value added โ‚น5), bread = โ‚น25 (value added โ‚น10) โ€” only count โ‚น25 (final) or sum value added = โ‚น25.

2

The National Income Aggregates โ€” The Complete Family

This is the most formula-heavy and exam-critical section. Master the step-by-step chain from GDP to Disposable Personal Income โ€” each step has exactly one adjustment to make.

GDP
at Market Price
+NFIA
GNP
at Market Price
โˆ’Dep
NNP
at Market Price
โˆ’NIT
NI / NNP
at Factor Cost
โˆ’CTโˆ’RE+TP
Personal
Income (PI)
โˆ’PT
Disposable
Personal Income

NFIA=Net Factor Income from Abroad ยท Dep=Depreciation ยท NIT=Net Indirect Taxes ยท CT=Corporate Taxes ยท RE=Retained Earnings ยท TP=Transfer Payments ยท PT=Personal Taxes

Table 3.2 โ€” The complete National Income aggregate family with formulas and India context
AggregateFull FormFormula / Key RelationshipConceptIndia Relevance
GDPMP Gross Domestic Product at Market Price C + I + G + (Xโˆ’M)
or GVA + Net Taxes on Products
Total output within geographical territory โ€” includes depreciation, at market prices India’s GDP (new series, base 2022-23): โ‚น345.47 lakh crore Nominal FY26 (MoSPI)
GNPMP Gross National Product at Market Price GDPMP + NFIA Output by nationals (residents) wherever located โ€” includes income of Indians abroad India’s GNP > GDP because remittances (~$118B in 2023โ€“World Bank) are NFIA inflows
NNPMP Net National Product at Market Price GNPMP โˆ’ Depreciation GNP after accounting for wear and tear of capital; the “net” output Gives a more accurate picture of income available โ€” excludes replacement investment
NNPFC
(= NI)
National Income (Net National Product at Factor Cost) NNPMP โˆ’ Net Indirect Taxes
(NIT = Indirect Taxes โˆ’ Subsidies)
Income earned by factors of production (labour, capital, land, enterprise) โ€” excludes taxes, adds back subsidies Basis of India’s per capita income calculation; used in income distribution analysis
PI Personal Income NI โˆ’ Corporate Taxes โˆ’ Retained Earnings + Transfer Payments Actual income received by individuals and households โ€” not all NI reaches households Basis of consumer spending (PFCE); reflects purchasing power of households
DPI Disposable Personal Income PI โˆ’ Personal Taxes Income actually available for spending or saving after paying taxes Directly drives consumer spending, savings rate; affected by tax policy changes like Budget 2025-26 middle class tax cuts
GVABP Gross Value Added at Basic Price GDPMP = GVABP + Taxes on Products โˆ’ Subsidies on Products Value added by all resident producer units; excludes taxes on products but includes other production taxes/subsidies India’s Real GVA FY26: โ‚น294.40 lakh crore, growth 7.7% (MoSPI, Feb 2026)
Master Formula Sheet
GNP = GDP + NFIA
NNPMP = GNP โˆ’ Depreciation (Capital Consumption Allowance)
NI = NNPFC = NNPMP โˆ’ Net Indirect Taxes
NIT = Indirect Taxes โˆ’ Subsidies
PI = NI โˆ’ Corporate Tax โˆ’ Undistributed Profits + Transfer Payments
DPI = PI โˆ’ Personal Direct Taxes
GDPMP = GVABP + Taxes on Products โˆ’ Subsidies on Products
๐ŸŽฏ Exam Alert โ€” MP vs FC

Market Price (MP) = price paid by buyer = includes indirect taxes, excludes subsidies.
Factor Cost (FC) = earnings of factors of production = excludes indirect taxes, includes subsidies.
Key formulas: GDP at FC = GDP at MP โˆ’ Net Indirect Taxes. NNP at FC = NNP at MP โˆ’ NIT. India’s National Income = NNP at FC. This is one of the most MCQ-tested relationships in all competitive exams.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ
Who Measures India’s National Income?

India’s national income is measured by the National Statistical Office (NSO) under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). The Central Statistics Office (CSO) was merged into NSO in 2019. India now follows the System of National Accounts (SNA) 2008 framework. In February 2026, MoSPI revised the GDP base year from 2011-12 to 2022-23 โ€” the most comprehensive statistical overhaul in India’s recent history.

3

Three Methods of Measuring National Income

National Income can be measured from three different angles โ€” production, income distribution, and expenditure. Since the economy is a circular flow, all three methods should give the same result (in theory). In practice, minor statistical discrepancies arise.

๐Ÿญ

1. Product / Output Method

Count the total value of final goods and services produced in all sectors of the economy during a year. Uses Value Added approach to avoid double counting.

Also called: Value Added Method / Industrial Origin Method
๐Ÿ’ผ

2. Income Method

Sum all factor incomes earned in the production process โ€” wages, rent, interest, profit, and mixed income. Measures NI from the distribution side.

Also called: Factor Income Method / Distributive Method
๐Ÿ›’

3. Expenditure Method

Sum all final expenditures made in the economy โ€” consumption (C), investment (I), government (G) and net exports (Xโˆ’M). Measures NI from the demand / spending side.

Also called: Final Expenditure Method / Outlay Method

Method 1 โ€” Product / Value Added Method (in detail)

๐Ÿ“Œ Value Added

Value Added by a firm = Value of Output โˆ’ Value of Intermediate Inputs consumed. Summing value added across all firms and sectors eliminates double counting and gives GDP at basic prices (GVA). Then add taxes on products and subtract subsidies to get GDP at market prices.

Table 3.3 โ€” Value Added Method: Bread production example (step-by-step)
Stage of ProductionValue of Output (โ‚น)Intermediate Input (โ‚น)Value Added (โ‚น)
Farmer grows wheat20020
Miller converts wheat to flour352015
Baker converts flour to bread603525
Retailer sells bread to consumer806020
TOTAL195 (would be double-counted)โ€”80 (= final price = correct NI contribution)

Method 2 โ€” Income Method (in detail)

All production ultimately generates factor incomes. We sum these to calculate national income:

Income Method Formula
NI = Compensation of Employees + Rent + Interest + Profit + Mixed Income

+ Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)
โˆ’ Net Indirect Taxes (to get NNP at FC = NI)

Mixed Income = income of self-employed / unincorporated enterprises (dominant in India’s informal sector)
Table 3.4 โ€” Components of Income Method and their nature
Factor Income ComponentWhat It IncludesFactor of Production
Compensation of EmployeesWages, salaries, allowances, employer’s contribution to provident fund, ESIC โ€” all cash and non-cash benefitsLabour
Operating SurplusRent (for land), Interest (for capital), Profit (for enterprise) โ€” divided from corporate surplusesLand, Capital, Enterprise
Mixed IncomeIncome of self-employed professionals, unincorporated enterprises, farmers โ€” cannot separate wages from profitLabour + Capital combined
๐ŸŒ India’s Income Method Challenge

India’s large informal sector (~50% of GDP, employing ~90% of workers) makes the Income Method particularly difficult to apply. Most transactions are unrecorded โ€” daily wage labour, self-employed vendors, small farmers. MoSPI uses surveys and proxy indicators to estimate Mixed Income. The new GDP series (base 2022-23, Feb 2026) incorporated improved data from GSTN, PFMS and household surveys to better capture the informal economy.

Method 3 โ€” Expenditure Method (in detail)

Every rupee of production is ultimately purchased by someone. The Expenditure Method adds up all categories of final spending in the economy:

Expenditure Method โ€” GDP Formula
GDP = C + I + G + (X โˆ’ M)

C = Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE) โ€” household spending on goods and services
I = Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) + Change in Stocks (CIS) โ€” investment in capital
G = Government Final Consumption Expenditure (GFCE) โ€” govt spending on goods, services, salaries
X = Exports of goods and services
M = Imports of goods and services
(Xโˆ’M) = Net Exports / Trade Balance

Note: India’s full formula = PFCE + GFCE + GFCF + CIS + Valuables + Exports โˆ’ Imports + Discrepancy
๐Ÿฅง India’s GDP by Expenditure Components โ€” FY 2024-25 (Approximate % of GDP)
Table 3.5 โ€” India’s GDP Expenditure Components โ€” approximate shares and trends
ComponentApprox. % of GDPFY26 Growth RateKey Driver
PFCE (Private Consumption)~56โ€“58%~7% (MoSPI)Rural demand, wage growth, urban middle class spending
GFCF (Gross Fixed Capital Formation)~32โ€“33%~7.8% (MoSPI)Public infrastructure capex (โ‚น11.1 lakh crore in Budget 2025-26); PLI schemes
GFCE (Government Consumption)~9โ€“10%ModerateRevenue expenditure: salaries, subsidies, defence
Net Exports (Xโˆ’M)Negative (~โˆ’1 to โˆ’2%)Services exports growingIndia runs a current account deficit; merchandise trade deficit but services surplus
๐ŸŽฏ Exam Alert โ€” GFCF vs GFCE

GFCF (Gross Fixed Capital Formation) = investment in new machinery, construction, equipment โ€” it is investment spending. It is the “I” in C+I+G+NX. GFCE (Government Final Consumption Expenditure) = government’s routine spending on goods and services โ€” it is the “G” in the formula. GFCF grows the economy’s productive capacity; GFCE does not. Both are very frequently confused in MCQs.

4

Real GDP vs Nominal GDP & the GDP Deflator

This is one of the most important โ€” and most frequently examined โ€” distinctions in all of macroeconomics. Let’s build it from scratch with a simple example.

Table 3.6 โ€” Simple illustration: Why nominal growth can mislead
YearOutput (Qty)PriceNominal GDP (โ‚น)Real GDP (Base Year Price โ‚น10)
Year 1 (Base)100 unitsโ‚น10โ‚น1,000โ‚น1,000
Year 2 (Inflation)100 unitsโ‚น15โ‚น1,500 (+50%)โ‚น1,000 (0% real growth)
Year 2 (Real Growth)120 unitsโ‚น12โ‚น1,440 (+44%)โ‚น1,200 (+20% real growth)
๐Ÿ“Œ Nominal GDP

GDP measured at current year market prices. Increases whenever output increases OR prices increase. Cannot distinguish real growth from inflation. India’s Nominal GDP FY26: โ‚น345.47 lakh crore (MoSPI, Feb 2026).

๐Ÿ“Œ Real GDP

GDP measured at constant prices of a base year. Inflation effect is removed using deflators. This is the true measure of economic growth. India’s Real GDP FY26: โ‚น322.58 lakh crore, growing at 7.6% (MoSPI, base year 2022-23).

๐Ÿ“Œ GDP Deflator

An implicit price index that measures the average price change of all goods and services included in GDP. Formula: GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) ร— 100. It is a broader measure of inflation than CPI because it covers all goods and services, not just a consumer basket. India’s Nominal GDP grew 8.6% while Real GDP grew 7.6% in FY26 โ€” the ~1% difference reflects the GDP deflator / price level increase.

๐Ÿ“Š India: Nominal GDP vs Real GDP Growth Rate Comparison
๐ŸŽฏ Exam Alert โ€” Base Year Change 2026

In February 2026, MoSPI revised India’s GDP base year from 2011-12 to 2022-23. This is a major statistical update โ€” the new series provides more accurate data using GST returns, PFMS, e-Vahan, and improved household surveys. Key implication: GDP figures under new base are not directly comparable with old series. Real GDP FY26 (new base) = โ‚น322.58 lakh crore at constant 2022-23 prices vs โ‚น201.90 lakh crore at constant 2011-12 prices. Both show ~7.6% growth โ€” the growth rate is more comparable than the absolute level.

5

Gross Value Added (GVA) โ€” India’s Sectoral Report Card

GVA (Gross Value Added) is the production-side measure of economic output. It shows which sectors of the economy are growing and contributing most to GDP. GDP = GVA + (Taxes on Products โˆ’ Subsidies on Products).

๐Ÿ“Œ GVA at Basic Price

GVA at basic price = Value of output at basic price โˆ’ Value of intermediate consumption. Basic price = price received by producer = includes production taxes and subsidies, but excludes taxes on products (like GST). India’s Real GVA FY26: โ‚น294.40 lakh crore, growth 7.7% (MoSPI, Feb 2026).

๐Ÿ“Š India’s GVA Sectoral Composition and Growth โ€” FY 2025-26
Table 3.7 โ€” India’s GVA by broad sectors and key data (MoSPI, Feb 2026, new base 2022-23)
SectorSub-sectorsApprox. GVA ShareFY26 GrowthKey Feature
Primary Sector
Agriculture & Mining
Crops, livestock, forestry, fishing, mining, quarrying ~18% ~3โ€“4% Employs ~45.5% of workforce; seasonal, weather-dependent; lowest GVA-to-employment ratio
Secondary Sector
Industry
Manufacturing, electricity, gas, water, construction ~27% ~9%+ (Manufacturing double-digit in FY26) Manufacturing grew at double-digit for 2nd year (FY23-24 & FY25-26); construction 10.8% Q4 growth
Tertiary Sector
Services
Trade, hotels, transport, IT/ITES, BFSI, real estate, public admin ~55% ~9.2% (FY26) India’s dominant GDP contributor; IT exports ~$200B+; financial services growing
๐ŸŒ India’s GVA Highlight โ€” FY 2025-26

According to MoSPI’s Second Advance Estimates (new base 2022-23, February 2026): Manufacturing sector led the Secondary sector to a 9%+ growth, recording double-digit expansion for the 2nd year in a row. The Tertiary sector grew 9.2%, with ‘Trade, Repair, Hotels, Transport, Communication’ growing at 10.1% โ€” reflecting India’s robust consumption and travel recovery. Real GVA grew at 7.7% for the full year vs 7.3% in FY25.

6

Per Capita Income & Its Limitations

National income gives us the total size of the economy. But to compare welfare across countries or across time, we need to account for population. That’s where per capita income comes in.

๐Ÿ“Œ Per Capita Income

Per Capita Income = National Income รท Total Population. It measures the average income per person. It is the most commonly used indicator to compare living standards across countries and is used in computing the HDI’s income component (GNI per capita, PPP).

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ India’s National Income Snapshot (Latest Verified Data)

โ‚น322.58L Cr
Real GDP FY26 (Constant 2022-23 prices)
MoSPI SAE, Feb 2026
โ‚น345.47L Cr
Nominal GDP FY26 (Current Prices)
MoSPI SAE, Feb 2026
7.6%
Real GDP Growth Rate FY26
MoSPI, Feb 2026
8.6%
Nominal GDP Growth Rate FY26
MoSPI, Feb 2026
โ‚น294.40L Cr
Real GVA FY26 (growth: 7.7%)
MoSPI, Feb 2026
~$2,934
Per Capita Income Nominal USD (2026)
IMF estimate 2026
2022-23
New GDP Base Year (revised Feb 2026)
MoSPI PIB, Feb 2026
29.7%
Gross Savings Rate (% of GNDI, 2022-23)
MoSPI NAS

โš ๏ธ Limitations of Per Capita Income (and GDP) as a Welfare Measure

๐Ÿ“Š Ignores Income Distribution

A country’s average per capita income can be high even if most people are poor โ€” because a small rich elite pulls up the average. India’s Gini โ‰ˆ 0.35 means significant inequality hidden by the average.

๐ŸŒณ Excludes Environmental Degradation

GDP counts oil spill clean-ups as GDP growth, and deforestation increases output temporarily. Green GDP / Environmental Accounting adjusts for this โ€” India launched the NCAVES (Natural Capital Accounting) initiative.

๐Ÿ  Ignores Non-Market Production

Household work (cooking, childcare), volunteer services, subsistence farming โ€” all produce real value but are excluded from GDP. In India, where women perform unpaid household labour worth trillions, GDP severely undercounts welfare.

๐Ÿง  Ignores Quality of Life

GDP doesn’t measure health, education, freedom, or happiness. High GDP per capita countries aren’t always the happiest (World Happiness Report). Bhutan famously uses Gross National Happiness instead.

๐Ÿ”„ Excludes Black Economy

India’s informal / shadow economy (estimated 20โ€“30% of GDP) is largely unrecorded โ€” hawkers, unregistered businesses, cash transactions. Official GDP understates actual economic activity.

๐Ÿ’ฑ PPP vs Nominal for Comparison

Comparing India’s per capita income ($2,934 nominal) with the USA’s (~$89,000) is misleading because prices are very different. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) adjusts for price differences โ€” India’s per capita income in PPP terms is approximately $10,000+, much higher than nominal.

๐Ÿ“ˆ India’s Per Capita Income Growth Trend (โ‚น at Current Prices โ€” Indicative)
7

โš ๏ธ Common Exam Mistakes

โŒ Mistake #1 โ€” GDP at MP โ‰  GDP at FC
โŒ Wrong“GDP at Market Price and GDP at Factor Cost are the same.”
โœ… CorrectGDP at MP = GDP at FC + Net Indirect Taxes. Market price includes taxes and excludes subsidies; factor cost excludes taxes and includes subsidies. Since India uses GDP at Market Price as headline number, NIT adjustment is critical.
โŒ Mistake #2 โ€” Transfer Payments are included in NI
โŒ Wrong“Government pensions and scholarships are included in National Income.”
โœ… CorrectTransfer payments (pensions, MGNREGA wages, PM-KISAN, scholarships) are NOT included in National Income because no production/service is rendered in return. They are included in Personal Income but not in NI. This is a very high-frequency MCQ trap.
โŒ Mistake #3 โ€” Second-hand sales count in GDP
โŒ Wrong“If I sell my used car for โ‚น5 lakh, it adds โ‚น5 lakh to GDP.”
โœ… CorrectResale of existing (second-hand) assets does NOT add to GDP โ€” the car was already counted in GDP when it was first produced. Only the dealer’s service charge (commission) is new production and counted. GDP measures current production only.
โŒ Mistake #4 โ€” GDP and NI are interchangeable
โŒ Wrong“GDP = National Income.”
โœ… CorrectNational Income = NNP at FC = GDP โˆ’ Depreciation + NFIA โˆ’ Net Indirect Taxes. GDP โ‰  NI. They differ by: (1) depreciation, (2) NFIA (whether domestic or national), and (3) indirect taxes vs factor cost. Confusing these costs marks in almost every exam.
โŒ Mistake #5 โ€” Nominal GDP growth is the “real” growth
โŒ Wrong“India’s nominal GDP grew 8.6% in FY26 โ€” so that’s India’s growth rate.”
โœ… CorrectAlways quote Real GDP growth (7.6% for FY26) for economic performance. Nominal GDP growth includes inflation. The GDP Deflator (Nominal/Real ร— 100) captures price-level changes. Real GDP = constant price = inflation-adjusted = true growth measure.

๐Ÿ’ก Chapter 3 โ€” Key Takeaways

  • 1National Income = NNP at Factor Cost = total income earned by residents from productive activity in a year. Count only final goods to avoid double counting.
  • 2The chain: GDPMP โ†’ (+NFIA) โ†’ GNPMP โ†’ (โˆ’Dep) โ†’ NNPMP โ†’ (โˆ’NIT) โ†’ NNPFC = NI โ†’ (โˆ’CTโˆ’RE+TP) โ†’ PI โ†’ (โˆ’PT) โ†’ DPI.
  • 3Three methods (all give same result): Product/Value Added Method, Income Method, Expenditure Method (C+I+G+NX).
  • 4Real GDP = at constant base year prices (inflation-removed). Nominal GDP = at current prices. GDP Deflator = (Nominal/Real) ร— 100. Always use Real GDP for growth rate.
  • 5GVABP + Taxes on Products โˆ’ Subsidies on Products = GDPMP. Real GVA FY26: โ‚น294.40 lakh crore, growth 7.7% (MoSPI, Feb 2026).
  • 6India’s National Income is measured by NSO/MoSPI. Base year changed from 2011-12 to 2022-23 in February 2026. India follows SNA 2008 framework.
  • 7GDP is an imperfect welfare measure: ignores inequality, environmental costs, non-market work, black economy, and quality of life.
  • 8India’s Nominal GDP FY26: โ‚น345.47 lakh crore (8.6% growth). Real GDP FY26: โ‚น322.58 lakh crore (7.6% growth). Gross Savings rate: ~29.7% of GNDI.

โšก Rapid Recall โ€” Exam Facts

NI = NNP at FC GNP = GDP + NFIA NNP = GNP โˆ’ Depreciation NIT = Indirect Tax โˆ’ Subsidies GDP at FC = GDP at MP โˆ’ NIT India GDP FY26 Nominal: โ‚น345.47 lakh crore India Real GDP growth FY26: 7.6% Base Year (new): 2022-23 NI measured by: NSO/MoSPI GDP framework: SNA 2008 Transfer payments NOT in NI 2nd-hand sales NOT in GDP Savings rate: ~29.7% of GNDI GVA FY26 real growth: 7.7%

๐ŸŽฏ Chapter 3 Assessment โ€” National Income

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