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Current Problems & Issues in Indian Economy | EconTweets
๐Ÿ“– Chapter 13 ยท Indian Economy
๐Ÿ“š Indian Economy for Competitive Exams ยท EconTweets Series

Current Problems &
Issues in Indian Economy

Jobless growth ยท K-shaped recovery ยท Fiscal deficit ยท Inequality ยท Agrarian distress ยท Inflation ยท Climate risks ยท Household savings decline โ€” the 10 most critical challenges facing India in 2025, with latest data.

๐Ÿ”ด Advanced โฑ๏ธ ~40 min read ๐Ÿ“ 12-Question Quiz ๐Ÿ“Š 5 Live Charts ๐Ÿ† Leaderboard

๐ŸŽฏ Relevant For: UPSC CSE MainsRBI Grade BNABARD Grade AState PSCIESCUET PGUGC NET

๐ŸŽฏ What You Will Learn

  • Diagnose India’s jobless growth paradox with latest PLFS & Economic Survey data
  • Explain K-shaped recovery and inequality crisis (Piketty / WIR 2024)
  • Analyse India’s fiscal deficit, public debt (83% of GDP) and FRBM challenges
  • Understand current account deficit, trade deficit and oil import dependence
  • Examine agrarian distress โ€” debt, climate, MSP controversy, farmer suicides
  • Evaluate household savings collapse (5.3% of GDP, down from 8%)
  • Assess climate economic risks: pollution 1.7M deaths, crop yield losses
  • Analyse gig economy / informal sector expansion and social security gaps
๐Ÿช Two Indias โ€” One Growing, One Struggling

India is the world’s 4th largest economy, growing at 6.5โ€“7%. The stock market hit all-time highs. India has 108 unicorn startups and the world’s fastest real-time payments system. Yet: 83% of India’s unemployed are youth. The top 10% of earners control 57.1% of national income (WIR 2024). MGNREGA demand is up 12% โ€” reflecting rural distress. Household net financial savings fell from 8% to 5.3% of GDP. Private investment as share of GDP hit a decade low (19.6%) in 2024.

India’s recovery from COVID-19 has been starkly “K-shaped” โ€” the top rungs of the economy soaring, the bottom half struggling with stagnant wages, food inflation, and job insecurity. Understanding these tensions โ€” between India’s macro brilliance and micro distress โ€” is the most important analytical challenge for every exam aspirant.

๐Ÿ“Š Economic Survey 2025-26 (PRS): Fiscal deficit target: below 4.5% of GDP (FY26). Public debt: ~83% of GDP. Climate finance: a “binding constraint.” Household debt rose to 41.3% of GDP (March 2025, RBI). IMF gave India’s GDP data a ‘C’ grade in 2025 โ€” for undercounting the informal sector.
1

India’s Economic Challenges โ€” The Current Scorecard

๐Ÿ“Š Key Problem Indicators โ€” India 2024-25 / 2025

57.1%
National income share of top 10% of earners (WIR 2024 / Universal Institutions)
World Inequality Report 2024
83%
Share of unemployed who are youth (ILO-IHD India Employment Report 2024)
ILO-IHD 2024
5.3%
Household net financial savings as % of GDP (FY23, down from 8% avg)
RBI Financial Stability Report
19.6%
Private investment as % of GDP (2024) โ€” decade low
Universal Institutions 2025
~83%
General government debt-to-GDP ratio (Centre + States, 2024-25)
IMF / OMFIF 2025
41.3%
Household debt as % of GDP (March 2025, rising)
RBI 2025
80%
India’s oil import dependence (% of crude requirement)
ICICIdirect / Energy data
1.7M
Annual deaths from air pollution (Lancet estimate)
Lancet / IAGyan 2025
๐Ÿ“Š India’s Fiscal Deficit โ€” Central Government (% of GDP) FY14 to FY26E
2

Problem 1: Jobless Growth & Employment Crisis

๐Ÿ“Œ Jobless Growth

A situation where GDP grows rapidly but formal employment creation lags far behind. Employment elasticity (% change in employment รท % change in GDP) is declining over time โ€” each percentage point of GDP growth creates fewer jobs than before. India grew at 7.6% (FY26 Q1) yet formal job creation remains insufficient to absorb ~10 million new entrants to the labour force annually.

Graduate Unemployment Paradox

29.1% of youth graduates are unemployed โ€” 9ร— the illiterate unemployment rate (3.4%). Only 8.25% of graduates employed in matching jobs (Economic Survey 2024-25). 47% of graduates deemed “unemployable” by industry standards.

Youth UR: 9.9% (PLFS 2024-25) vs Overall 3.2%

Manufacturing Jobs Shortage

India’s manufacturing is only ~17% of GDP despite Make in India push. Manufacturing employment share fell from 12.1% to 11.4% (PLFS 2023-24). PLI schemes creating some jobs (57 lakh in organised manufacturing FY15-24) but not enough at scale.

57 lakh manufacturing jobs added in 9 years (Economic Survey 2025-26)

Low Female Workforce Participation

Urban female LFPR: only 25.6% (Q1 FY26). Despite rising overall FLFPR (41.7% PLFS 2023-24), most new female workers are in low-quality agricultural/unpaid work, not formal employment. Urban female unemployment: 8.2%.

Female NEET rate: 48.4% โ€” nearly 5ร— male NEET rate

Agricultural Over-Employment

Agriculture employs 42-45% of workforce but contributes only ~16% to GDP โ€” massive disguised unemployment. India needs to move 3.5 million people out of agriculture annually + create 7.85 million non-farm jobs/year (Economic Survey 2024-25). This twin target is not being met.

7.85M non-farm jobs needed per year (Eco Survey 2024-25)
๐Ÿ“Š India’s Employment Elasticity โ€” Declining with Each Growth Cycle
๐ŸŽฏ Mains Question Pattern โ€” Jobless Growth

UPSC Mains 2015 asked: “Success of Make in India depends on the success of Skill India and radical labour reforms.” UPSC Mains 2023 asked about India’s unemployment measurement methodology. The key analytical framework: India has three interrelated employment problems: (1) Open unemployment โ€” 3.2% official but 9.9% youth; (2) Underemployment/skill mismatch โ€” 8.25% of graduates in matching jobs; (3) Disguised unemployment โ€” 42-45% in agriculture with zero marginal product. India needs structural reforms in both education-industry alignment AND labour-intensive manufacturing promotion.

3

Problem 2: Rising Inequality โ€” The K-Shaped Economy

๐Ÿ“Œ K-Shaped Recovery

An economic pattern where different segments of the economy recover at sharply different rates after a shock โ€” like a “K” where one arm goes up and the other goes down. Post-COVID India shows a K-shaped pattern: corporate profits and stock markets soared while wages for informal workers stagnated; urban elite consumption recovered strongly while rural demand lagged; the educated gained while the unskilled lost.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Top of the K โ€” Surging (The “Two Indias” Problem)

Stock market: +28% in FY24. 162 billionaires in India (2022). Corporate profits at record highs. 140,000+ startups. Top 10% control 57.1% of national income. IT/services sector wages rising. Urban luxury consumption booming. India’s digital economy $402B. FDI $81B (FY23).

โ†•๏ธ Growing divide

๐Ÿ“‰ Bottom of the K โ€” Stagnating / Declining

Bottom 50% income share: 15%. Rural wages stagnant in real terms. MGNREGA demand up 12% โ€” rural distress signal. Household savings fell to 5.3% of GDP (from 8% avg). Household debt: 41.3% of GDP (March 2025). Food inflation biting the poor hardest. 85% informal sector workforce without social security.

Table 13.1 โ€” India’s inequality: key data points (2024-25)
IndicatorValueSourceImplication
Top 10% income share57.1%WIR 2024 / Universal Institutions 2025More than half of national income going to one-tenth of population โ€” extreme concentration
Top 1% income share~22-23% of national incomeWIR 2024 / World Inequality LabTop 1% earns 23ร— the average Indian income (2022-23)
Bottom 50% income share15%WIR 2024 / World Inequality LabHalf of India’s population shares just 15% of income
Wealth Gini coefficient~0.75 (estimated)OECD/WIR estimatesExtreme wealth concentration โ€” top 1% own ~40% of wealth
Number of billionaires162 (2022) โ€” up from 1 (1991)Forbes / Down to Earth 2025162ร— increase in 30 years reflects extreme wealth polarisation
Rural-Urban MPCE gapRural โ‚น4,122 vs Urban โ‚น6,996/month (HCES 2022-23)NSSO HCES 2022-23Urban per capita consumption nearly 70% higher than rural
Regional inequalityMaharashtra GSDP/capita ~5ร— BiharState GDP dataIndia’s richest and poorest states diverging, not converging
๐Ÿ“Š India’s Income Share Distribution โ€” Top 10%, Middle 40%, Bottom 50% (2024)
4

Problem 3: Fiscal Deficit & Public Debt Sustainability

India’s fiscal position โ€” while improving โ€” remains a structural challenge. High deficits crowd out private investment, limit fiscal space for shocks, and raise debt sustainability concerns.

Table 13.2 โ€” India’s fiscal position: key numbers 2024-26
IndicatorValue / TargetContext
Central Government Fiscal Deficit4.8โ€“4.9% of GDP (FY25); Target 4.4% (FY26)FRBM target is 3% of GDP โ€” long deferred. Centre’s deficit was 5.6% in FY23-24 before coming down.
General Government Deficit~6-7% of GDP (Centre + States combined)State fiscal deficits add significantly โ€” aggregate state deficit rose to 3.2% GDP in 2024-25 (Economic Survey 2025-26)
Public Debt-to-GDP Ratio~83% of GDP (FY24-25)Well above pre-pandemic ~70%; IMF flags sustainability risk; lower than advanced economies but high for an emerging market
State-level fiscal stressOnly 11 states had revenue surplus in 2024-25Most states running deficits; increasing reliance on cash transfers (farm loan waivers, income support) worries RBI
FRBM TargetsFiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act (2003) targets 3% deficit and 40% central debt3% target repeatedly deferred; escape clause invoked during COVID; new glide path targets gradual consolidation to 4.5% then 4%
Capital Expenditureโ‚น11.1 lakh crore (Budget 2024-25); ~3.4% of GDPPositive โ€” government using deficit for productive capex rather than pure consumption; infrastructure-led growth model
โš ๏ธ The Fiscal Risk: States’ Freebies Culture

India’s RBI and Economic Survey 2025-26 have flagged a growing concern: states are increasingly spending on populist cash transfers, farm loan waivers, free power, and income support schemes. While individually rational (they win elections), collectively these crowd out productive capital expenditure on health, education, and infrastructure. State fiscal deficits rose to 3.2% of GDP in 2024-25. Only 11 of India’s 28 states had revenue surpluses. This “freebies competition” between states risks long-run fiscal sustainability.

5

Problem 4: Household Savings Decline & Private Investment Lull

One of India’s most concerning structural trends is the collapse in household financial savings and the stagnation of private investment โ€” both essential for sustaining India’s high growth trajectory.

Household Savings Collapse

Net financial savings of households fell from 7.3% of GDP (FY22) to just 5.3% of GDP (FY23) โ€” well below the decade average of 8%. This means Indian households are saving less in financial instruments (bank deposits, mutual funds, insurance) and possibly dissaving or accumulating debt.

FY22: 7.3% โ†’ FY23: 5.3% of GDP | RBI Financial Stability Report

Household Debt Rising

Household debt rose to 41.3% of GDP (March 2025, RBI). Retail loans (consumer credit, personal loans, home loans) grew faster than income. This “spending on credit” fuelled post-COVID consumption recovery but risks creating a debt stress cycle if growth slows or interest rates rise.

Household debt: 41.3% of GDP (March 2025)

Private Investment at Decade Low

Private sector investment as a share of GDP fell to 19.6% in 2024 โ€” the lowest in a decade. Despite corporate profits at record highs and low corporate tax rates (22%), companies are not investing in new capacity. Reasons: global uncertainty, domestic demand concerns, credit access gaps for SMEs.

Private investment: 19.6% GDP (2024) โ€” decade low

What This Means for Growth

India’s growth model depends on: Savings โ†’ Investment โ†’ Growth. If household savings fall AND private investment is weak, India becomes more dependent on government capital expenditure (which is rising but limited by fiscal constraints). This creates structural vulnerability in the growth model.

Government capex rising: โ‚น11.1 lakh crore (FY25) to compensate
6

Problem 5: Trade Deficit & Oil Import Vulnerability

India’s external sector presents a persistent challenge โ€” a structural merchandise trade deficit driven primarily by oil and electronics imports, partially offset by IT services exports and remittances.

Table 13.3 โ€” India’s external sector: key data (2024-25)
IndicatorValueSource/Context
Merchandise Trade Deficit~$76B (FY25 narrowed from $122B in FY23-24)Narrowed due to reduced imports and improved service exports; Britannica Money 2025
Current Account Deficit (CAD)~1โ€“1.6% of GDP (FY25-26 projection)Manageable but widened in first 3 quarters of FY25 due to trade deficit; World Bank 2024
Oil Import Dependence~80% of crude oil requirements imported80% import dependence makes India vulnerable to global oil price shocks; every $10/barrel rise adds ~$12-15B to import bill
Services ExportsIndia: 4.3% of world services exports (2024); IT exports $250B+Strong offset for goods trade deficit; IT, business services, tourism
Remittances~$125-135B/year โ€” India is world’s top recipientMassive support to current account; risk: immigration restrictions globally (Eco Survey 2025-26 flags this)
Forex Reserves$693.32B (December 2025); ~11 months import coverStrong reserves provide buffer against external shocks; down from $700B+ peak
US Tariffs Risk50% bilateral tariffs imposed by US (2025 โ€” under Trump administration)Merchandise exports to US = ~2% of India’s GDP; IMF projects FY26 growth at 6.6% (down from 7.8%) partly due to tariff impact; India negotiating FTA (India-EU deal signed in principle Jan 2026)
๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ
The Oil Vulnerability Problem

India imports ~80% of its crude oil requirements. This makes India one of the world’s most oil-vulnerable major economies. Every $10/barrel increase in global oil price adds approximately $12-15 billion to India’s import bill, widens the current account deficit, depreciates the rupee, and stokes inflation (especially fuel, transport, and food prices). During 2022 (post-Ukraine war oil spike), this was a major inflation driver. India’s energy transition strategy โ€” 500 GW renewables by 2030 โ€” is partly a long-term hedge against this oil vulnerability.

7

Problem 6: Agrarian Distress โ€” The Farmer Crisis

Despite record foodgrain production (3,577 LMT in FY25), Indian agriculture faces deep structural distress. The paradox of agricultural prosperity at the macro level coexisting with farmer suffering at the micro level is one of India’s most persistent contradictions.

Farmer Indebtedness

Farmers caught in a debt trap โ€” borrowing from informal sources at 20-30% annual interest to fund seeds, fertilizers, and irrigation. Farm loan waivers (state governments: Maharashtra, UP, Karnataka) provide relief but don’t fix structural causes. Debt-driven farmer suicides: ~10,000-11,000/year (NCRB data) in Maharashtra, AP/Telangana, Karnataka, MP.

Farmer suicides: ~10,000-11,000/year (NCRB)

Climate Change & Yield Losses

Rising temperatures and erratic monsoons increasingly disrupt agriculture. In March 2022, exceptional heat caused 10-35% wheat yield loss in major growing regions. Crop yields remain “considerably lower” than potential โ€” constrained by input gaps and structural issues (Economic Survey 2025-26). Only 55% of net sown area irrigated.

March 2022 heat wave: 10-35% wheat yield loss

MSP Controversy

MSP declared for 23 crops but effective procurement only for wheat and rice (mainly Punjab/Haryana). Swaminathan Commission recommended C2+50% formula โ€” not implemented. 2020-21 Farm Laws protest forced repeal of laws. Demand for “Legal Guarantee to MSP” remains unresolved. MSP incidence lower for pulses, oilseeds, horticulture.

MSP for 23 crops, but effective procurement for 2

Fragmented Holdings & Low Productivity

86.2% of farmers are small/marginal (<2 ha). Average farm: 1.08 ha. Crop yields far below global averages (rice: 2.3 vs China’s 7 t/ha). Despite Agriculture sector growing at 4.5% per decade (2015-25), per-farmer income remains low due to the sheer number of farmers sharing agricultural income.

Average farm: 1.08 ha | Rice yield: 2.3 vs China’s 7 t/ha
๐ŸŒ The Agriculture Paradox โ€” Record Production, Persistent Distress

India achieved record foodgrain production of 3,577 LMT in FY25 (Economic Survey 2025-26). Yet agricultural income per household remains low because: (1) Too many farmers share the agricultural income โ€” dividing 16% of GDP among 42-45% of the workforce gives very low per-worker income; (2) Post-harvest losses of 30-40% in fruits and vegetables waste farmer efforts; (3) Market failures โ€” farmers get only 15-30% of final consumer price; (4) Input cost inflation โ€” fertilizers, seeds, and diesel prices rose, squeezing margins. The solution requires both productivity improvements and market reforms.

8

Problem 7: Climate Change & Environmental Risks

Climate change is no longer a distant threat for India โ€” it is an immediate economic and developmental reality, already affecting agricultural productivity, urban infrastructure, and public health.

Air Pollution โ€” 1.7 Million Deaths Annually

Air pollution costs India approximately 1.7 million lives per year (Lancet estimate, cited by IAGyan 2025). It reduces effective working hours, increases healthcare costs, and lowers productivity โ€” especially in Delhi and the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Stubble burning in Punjab/Haryana (Green Revolution legacy) contributes seasonally.

1.7M pollution deaths/year | GDP impact estimated at 3-8% of GDP

Extreme Weather Events Increasing

Floods, cyclones, droughts, and heatwaves are becoming more frequent and severe. 2022 heat wave: 10-35% wheat yield loss. Kerala floods (2018), Cyclone Amphan (2020), Assam floods (recurring) have caused billions in economic damage. Climate change threatens to undo agricultural gains.

Cyclone Amphan 2020: $13.6B damage | 2022 heat: wheat yield -35%

Water Scarcity & Groundwater Depletion

India extracts 251 BCM of groundwater annually โ€” 25% of world total. Punjab’s water table falling ~1 metre/year. By 2025, 54% of India’s wells had declining water levels (NITI Aayog). 600 million Indians face high to extreme water stress. Climate change will worsen monsoon uncertainty.

Punjab: water table falling 1m/year | NITI Aayog: extreme water stress

Climate Finance Gap

Economic Survey 2025-26 explicitly states: climate finance is a “binding constraint” โ€” domestic resources inadequate for the investment scale needed. Urban infrastructure, hard-to-abate industries, and MSMEs remain underfunded for climate adaptation. India needs $2.5 trillion for net zero by 2070 โ€” a massive financing challenge.

Climate finance: “binding constraint” โ€” Economic Survey 2025-26
9

Problems 8โ€“10: Inflation, Gig Economy & Geopolitical Risks

๐Ÿ“Š Problem 8: Inflation & Food Price Volatility

India’s headline inflation has moderated significantly โ€” CPI inflation fell to 3.2% in April 2025 (within RBI’s 4% target, down from ~6-7% in 2022-23). However, food inflation remains structurally volatile โ€” food items constitute nearly half (48%) of India’s CPI basket, making overall inflation highly sensitive to agricultural supply disruptions. Vegetable and pulse prices spike seasonally, disproportionately hurting the poor.

The RBI’s inflation targeting framework (4% ยฑ 2% tolerance band) has been broadly effective. The repo rate peaked at 6.5% and was cut to 5.25% by December 2025 as inflation moderated. But “core inflation” (ex-food and fuel) remains around 4%, suggesting underlying demand-side pressures.

๐Ÿ“ฒ Problem 9: Gig Economy & Informal Sector Expansion

Table 13.4 โ€” India’s gig economy and informal sector: key facts and challenges
AspectDataChallenge
Gig workers7.7 million (2020-21, NITI Aayog); likely 2ร— by 2025-26Excluded from minimum wage, social security, occupational safety laws
Gig share of workforce~2% of total workforce (Economic Survey 2025-26)Growing but remain in a regulatory grey zone
Informal sector~80-85% of total workforce; 39 crore in unorganised sectorNo job security, written contracts, PF, ESI, or leave entitlements
Labour Codes 20204 codes replacing 29 central labour lawsMost states have NOT notified implementation rules โ€” reform largely on paper as of 2025
E-Shram Portal29 crore+ unorganised workers registeredRegistration without portability of benefits limits practical impact
Platform economy risksAI threatening traditional IT labour arbitrage modelIndia’s $250B+ IT industry may face structural disruption from AI; generative AI performing tasks previously done by large Indian BPO workforce

๐ŸŒ Problem 10: Geopolitical & External Risks

๐ŸŒ
External Vulnerabilities 2025-26

US tariffs (50% bilateral tariffs imposed by Trump administration in 2025): Merchandise exports to US = ~2% of India’s GDP; textiles, chemicals, engineering goods facing headwinds. India-EU FTA finalised in principle (Jan 2026) โ€” reduces dependence on US. Global trade slowdown: OECD projects global growth at 3.2% โ€” weaker export demand for India. Capital flow volatility: Emerging markets saw ~$1 trillion capital outflows in recent years; India’s forex reserves at $693B provide buffer. Geopolitical tensions: China-US tensions create supply chain opportunities for India (China+1) but also risks of escalation. Oil price uncertainty: 80% import dependence makes India vulnerable to any oil market shock.

10

Way Forward โ€” Policy Solutions

These challenges require coordinated, long-run structural reforms โ€” not quick fixes. The Economic Survey 2025-26 and IMF/OECD recommendations converge on the following priorities:

๐Ÿญ

Manufacturing-Led Job Creation

Deepen PLI schemes in labour-intensive sectors (textiles, footwear, toys). Reform industrial relations laws. Encourage China+1 supply chain migration to India. Vocational education reforms to bridge skill-industry gap.

๐Ÿ“š

Education & Skill Reform

Implement NEP 2020 with industry collaboration. Scale PMKVY 4.0 (AI, green jobs, Industry 4.0). Reform higher education curriculum to focus on employability. PM Internship Scheme for 1 crore youth in top-500 companies.

๐Ÿ’ฐ

Fiscal Consolidation with Quality Spending

Reach FRBM 3% deficit target through expenditure quality improvement. Shift state spending from populist cash transfers to productive capital investments. Expand GST base โ€” bring more informal economy into the tax net.

๐ŸŒพ

Agricultural Transformation

Expand e-NAM, FPOs, cold chain infrastructure. Effective implementation of MSP for all 23 crops. PM Dhan Dhaanya Krishi Yojana for 100 low-productivity districts. Climate-resilient seed varieties; micro-irrigation expansion.

๐ŸŒฑ

Green Transition as Growth Engine

500 GW renewables by 2030 creates green manufacturing jobs and reduces oil vulnerability. PM Surya Ghar (rooftop solar), SHANTI Bill (private nuclear energy), green hydrogen. Mobilise international climate finance under COP frameworks.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ

Social Security for Informal Workers

Extend ESIC/EPFO benefits to gig and platform workers. Implement Labour Codes 2020 (states to notify rules). Build on E-Shram’s 29 crore registrations for portable social security. One Nation One Ration Card implementation.

๐Ÿค

Private Investment Revival

Improve ease of doing business. Strengthen IBC implementation for faster insolvency resolution. Reduce regulatory uncertainty in key sectors. Develop corporate bond market to give companies non-bank financing options.

๐ŸŒ

Export Diversification

Negotiate FTAs with UK, EU (signed Jan 2026), GCC, ASEAN. Target $1 trillion merchandise exports by 2030 (World Bank goal). Diversify from IT services to electronics, pharmaceuticals, textiles, green tech exports. Leverage India’s AI talent pool for digital services.

11

โš ๏ธ Common Exam Mistakes

โŒ Mistake #1 โ€” India’s 3.2% unemployment means there’s no job crisis
โŒ Wrong“India’s low unemployment rate of 3.2% (PLFS) shows no significant employment problem exists.”
โœ… CorrectThe 3.2% official UR masks deep structural employment problems: (1) Youth UR = 9.9%; (2) Graduate UR = 29.1%; (3) Disguised unemployment in agriculture = hundreds of millions; (4) 80-85% of workers are informal/unprotected; (5) CMIE estimates 7-9%. The “low” UR reflects people accepting any subsistence work โ€” not genuine employment quality.
โŒ Mistake #2 โ€” K-shaped recovery means V-shaped growth for some
โŒ Wrong“K-shaped recovery is just another term for V-shaped recovery in some sectors.”
โœ… CorrectA K-shaped recovery specifically describes divergence within the economy โ€” upper income groups/formal sector recovering strongly (the upper arm of K) while lower income/informal sector stagnates or declines (lower arm of K). It is fundamentally about inequality of recovery, not just speed. Post-COVID India showed this: stock markets and corporate profits boomed while rural wages and informal sector incomes lagged.
โŒ Mistake #3 โ€” India’s fiscal deficit is the central government deficit only
โŒ Wrong“India’s fiscal deficit is 4.5% of GDP, as stated in the Union Budget.”
โœ… CorrectThe 4.4โ€“4.5% target refers to the central government fiscal deficit only. When state deficits (3.2% of GDP in 2024-25) are added, the general government deficit (Centre + States) is approximately 6-7% of GDP โ€” much higher. This is why India’s total public debt is ~83% of GDP while the central debt alone is lower. For UPSC Mains, always clarify which deficit you’re referring to.
โŒ Mistake #4 โ€” Agricultural distress is only about farmer suicides
โŒ Wrong“Agrarian distress in India is primarily a social problem โ€” farmer suicides.”
โœ… CorrectAgrarian distress is a comprehensive structural economic problem encompassing: low productivity (rice yield 2.3 vs China’s 7 t/ha), inadequate MSP coverage, debt trap, fragmented holdings, post-harvest losses (30-40%), marketing inefficiency, climate vulnerability, and inadequate irrigation (only 55% of NSA). Farmer suicides are a symptom, not the root cause. The solution requires multi-dimensional structural reforms, not just loan waivers.
โŒ Mistake #5 โ€” Declining household savings is a purely positive sign (consumption rising)
โŒ Wrong“Household savings declining to 5.3% of GDP shows Indians are consuming more โ€” a positive growth signal.”
โœ… CorrectWhile increased consumption can signal rising prosperity, the decline in household FINANCIAL savings (not physical savings) alongside a sharp rise in household DEBT (to 41.3% of GDP) suggests households may be consuming on credit rather than from income growth. This is a risk signal โ€” if incomes don’t rise, rising household debt creates vulnerability to a consumption slowdown and financial stress. RBI and OECD both flag this as a concern.

๐Ÿ’ก Chapter 13 โ€” Key Takeaways

  • 1India’s economy has a “K-shaped” character: strong macro aggregates (7%+ GDP growth, $693B forex, 4th largest economy) coexist with micro distress (57.1% income to top 10%, stagnant rural wages, 83% unemployed are youth, 80-85% informal workforce).
  • 2Jobless growth: India needs 7.85M non-farm jobs/year but is not creating enough. 29.1% of graduates unemployed (9ร— illiterate rate). Only 8.25% of graduates in matching jobs. Employment elasticity declining.
  • 3Inequality: Top 10% earn 57.1% of national income; bottom 50% earn 15%. 162 billionaires (up from 1 in 1991). Rural-urban MPCE gap: urban 70% higher. India is “Billionaire Raj” territory (Piketty, WIR 2024).
  • 4Fiscal challenge: Central deficit ~4.4-4.8% of GDP; state deficits adding 3.2%; general government deficit ~6-7% GDP. Public debt ~83% of GDP. FRBM 3% target repeatedly deferred. States’ freebies culture concerns RBI.
  • 5Household stress: Net financial savings fell from 8% to 5.3% of GDP (FY23). Household debt rose to 41.3% of GDP (March 2025). Private investment at decade low: 19.6% of GDP.
  • 6Agrarian distress: Despite record production (3,577 LMT FY25), farm incomes low due to fragmentation (86.2% small/marginal, avg 1.08 ha), MSP coverage gaps, post-harvest losses (30-40%), debt traps, climate vulnerability. Farmer suicides ~10,000-11,000/year (NCRB).
  • 7External vulnerabilities: 80% oil import dependence; merchandise trade deficit ~$76B (FY25). US tariffs (50% bilateral) threaten exports. Remittances ($125-135B) and IT services ($250B+) partially offset. Forex reserves $693B provide buffer.
  • 8Climate risks: 1.7M annual pollution deaths (Lancet). Agriculture increasingly exposed to extreme weather. Climate finance described as “binding constraint” (Economic Survey 2025-26). Punjab’s groundwater table falling 1m/year โ€” Green Revolution ecological debt due.

โšก Rapid Recall โ€” Exam Facts

Top 10% income: 57.1% of national income Bottom 50% income: 15% K-shaped recovery: post-COVID divergence Household savings: 5.3% GDP (FY23) Household debt: 41.3% of GDP (March 2025) Private investment: 19.6% GDP โ€” decade low Fiscal deficit target: 4.4% (FY26) Public debt: ~83% of GDP State deficit: 3.2% GDP (2024-25) Trade deficit: ~$76B (FY25) Oil import dependence: 80% Forex reserves: $693B (Dec 2025) Pollution deaths: 1.7M/year (Lancet) IMF: C-grade for India GDP data (2025) Jobs needed: 7.85M/year (Eco Survey) Graduate UR: 29.1% Gig workers: ~2% of workforce Informal sector: 80-85% Farm average size: 1.08 ha US tariffs: 50% bilateral (2025) India-EU FTA: signed in principle Jan 2026

๐ŸŽฏ Chapter 13 Assessment โ€” Current Problems in Indian Economy

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ยฉ EconTweets. For educational purposes only. Data: OECD Economic Outlook 2025, IMF Article IV 2025, Economic Survey 2025-26 (PRS), World Bank, World Inequality Report 2024, RBI FSR, Deloitte Insights 2026. Zero hallucination.

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