A news item that has dominated the business media in India recently is that India has pipped France to become the sixth-largest economy in the world. Not surprisingly, the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made a big song and dance about it, as it does for almost everything. At the same time, those against the Modi government have been asking, What’s the big deal?
The truth, as usual, is somewhere in between. Let’s take a look at a graph that basically plots the gross domestic products of the world’s 10 biggest economies.

- The GDP of the global top 10 economies. Image: Vivek Kaul
What does the graph tell us? The French GDP in 2017 was US$2.582 trillion. The Indian GDP was $2.597 trillion. As India has grown over the years, it has become bigger than many economies. This is par for the course. It’s not the first time something like this has happened.
Let’s take the case of Canada. As we can see from the graph, Canada is the 10th-largest economy in the world. In 2009, the Canadian GDP was $1.371 trillion. The Indian GDP was slightly lower at $1.324 trillion. In 2010, the Canadian GDP was $1.613 trillion. The Indian GDP was $1.657 trillion. Thus, in 2010, India became a bigger economy than Canada.
Let’s go back a few years more and take the case of South Korea, which is currently the 12th-largest economy in the world. In 2006, it had a GDP of $1.012 trillion. The Indian GDP was $920.317 billion. In 2007, the Korean GDP was $1.123 trillion. The Indian GDP was $1.201 trillion. Thus India became a bigger economy than South Korea.
The point here is that the Indian economy has become bigger than other major economies even in the past, during the era when Dr Manmohan Singh was the prime minister.
As the pivot of global growth moves from Europe and North America to Asia (ex-Japan), the Indian economy will keep becoming bigger than other major economies in the years to come. It is more or less certain that the Indian economy will become bigger than the British economy this year. Getting back to France, that country has not grown in the last 10 years. In 2007, the French GDP was $2.657 trillion. In 2017, 10 years later, it was slightly lower at $2.582 trillion.
What about the UK? In 2007, the British GDP was $3.074 trillion. In 2017, it was significantly lower at $2.622 trillion.
The larger point here is that the Indian economy in terms of size has been competing against economies that have contracted or barely grown over the years. Even Germany, which is currently the fourth-largest economy in the world, barely grew between 2007 and 2017. In 2007, the German GDP was $3.44 trillion. In 2017, it was $3.677 trillion.
On the other side, as India has grown, it has pulled a multitude of its people out of poverty. A recent study by the Brookings Institution notes:
“According to our projections, Nigeria has already overtaken India as the country with the largest number of extreme poor in early 2018, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo could soon take over the No 2 spot. At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall.”
Indeed, this couldn’t have been achieved without economic growth and the fact that the Indian economy has pipped many others to become a bigger economy over the decades.
If anything, this tells our politicians all over again that economic growth is the best antidote to poverty, which is something some of them refuse to believe. Having said that, there are other points that need to be made here:
- In 2017, India’s population was around 1.34 billion. It took 1.34 billion Indians to generate a GDP of $2.597 trillion. On the other hand, the population of France in 2017 was just 67 million, or around 5% of the population of India. They generated a GDP more or less similar to that of India. What that basically means is that an average Frenchman is much more productive than an average Indian. The per capita income of France in 2017 was $38,476.70 and that of India was $1,939.60. The French per capita income is nearly 20 times India’s. The poverty of India can also be gleaned from what it takes to be a part of India’s richest 1%. As James Crabtree writes in his new book The Billionaire Raj: A Journey through India’s New Gilded Age: “In North America it required $4.5 million in assets; in an average European country $1.4 million. In India the same figure was just $32,892.” The point is that the Indian economy still has a long way to go before it reaches anywhere near the French economy. GDP is just one measure.
- As India has grown over the years, the rich have captured the bulk of the gain. The World Inequality Report of 2018 points out that the top 10% of the Indian population earned around 55% of the national income. In 1980, this was close to 32%. While some inequality will always be a part of society, nevertheless, a rapid increase creates its own set of problems.
- Close to 10 million Indians enter the workforce every year and there are very few jobs available for them.
- Many Indian public-sector banks are technically bankrupt. A country that has ambitions of becoming a global economic power cannot have a large number of its banks not being in a position to carry out fresh lending.
- India’s health and education sectors continue to be in a mess and suffer from huge government apathy.
Yes, India has grown and become bigger than many of the world’s largest economies over the years, and that is a good thing, but there are many other things about the Indian economy that are holding it back. And from the way things currently are, it doesn’t look like the current government has much interest in correcting these things.

If growth cannot be attributed to the current govt so are the flaws in the economy.the author says nothing that a well read Indian doesn’t know.Blame and credit are two sides of the same coin.if current govt cannot be credited for growth it cannot be blamed for areas that we are lagging in.This article for me seems like another of propaganda tools which one political party uses for another.
Nikhil Sundar use big Mac index to know real purchasing power parity
Grow up Vivek Kaul… Would u want to agree the same logic for Indira, Rajeev and Mr Nehru that they were not responsible for growth of India just like current govt… Why dont u include discreditinf these PM in ur article as well…
This article last parts does indicate the Amarthesen’s ideas about education and health care deficiencies. The present government is not responsible for this. The author must note it. You only played the numbers available to you. Certainly, the present government will take the credit of the progress of this nation. His intention is to belittle the achievements of this government and nation.
Nipun Sawhney Huh? Salaried class in India is Upper middle class, everyone else is living on foodstamps then? Devru, modlu helodu artha madko, illa muchkondu teppuge kuthko yakandre ninge thumba vishya gothilla. Gothiro pudang thara alladustha idya.
Vikram Reddy you are ignorant bigot commenting against a muslim guy with hate speech. Gandu hai tuh.
Nikhil Sundar This is exactly what I was talking about. Lol. `The salaried class` you talk about is the upper middle class and falls in the top 1% of income earners in India and not representative of the salaried class. The top 1% of income earners in France are not having to compromise with going out or anything like that so what you say is an unfair comparison – top 1 % earners in France earn 500000 dollars and above so even in this specific segment you get your facts wrong even with your wrong definition of salaried people.
Even a peon, a driver, a cook, a maid can be salaried with a fixed income but they would be better off in france. This is why I said andh bhakti. Khud ka bias lagalo bhai har jagah.
All this inspire of Modi.
India is a big and independent country in every way.
But India has to learn to act as a big and independent country with confidence.
Indian leadership suffers from inferiority complex. Nehru, Shastri and Indira had gutts.
Others were and are jokes.
God save India from Rahul!
Atleast they did not die because some extremist decided to blow himself up for heavenly rewards.
Nipun Sawhney Your last line says it all, commie agents in disguise.
In heart of capital, three siblings died of starvation … – Times of India
Nipun Sawhney First off if you don’t know the person you’re having a debate with – don’t label them, I don’t know you and the feeling is likewise I think from your end as well, so let’s keep it that way. Secondly, I brought in Liechtenstein because you along with the author are in the habit of comparing extremes when it favors your cause. Let’s get back to coffee and cost of living in France vs India:
Indices Difference Info
Consumer Prices in France are 215.28% higher than in India
Consumer Prices Including Rent in France are 235.60% higher than in India
Rent Prices in France are 318.52% higher than in India
Restaurant Prices in France are 336.03% higher than in India
Groceries Prices in France are 189.87% higher than in India
Local Purchasing Power in France is 29.52% higher than in India
You can look up the other info from this link.
https://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/compare_countries_result.jsp?country1=India&country2=France
And from my personal experience growning up in Bangalore and having lived in Europe for 2.5 years and the last 10 years in the US, I can tell you that what you consider to live as a middle class in India would be tight as a salaried employee in Europe – things like taking your family for dinner or the movies are fairly expensive.
The good things to appreciate regardless of the government of the day is that after nearly 1000 years of loot and plunder especially in the last 300 years from our ex colonial masters where our GDP share went from 23% of the world to nearly nothing post independence, in 70+ years we’re climbing the ladder again and as urbunization of population is happening, people are coming in search of a better life and it looks like they’re staying because they have found it. We have miles to go, but it’s good to reflect on where we are now.
Nipun Sawhney Sire, there’s no chest thumping. Just trying to point out the flaws in the author’s arguement and in yours as well. Who isn’t agreeing that their standard of living isn’t good? We’re talking about sizes of the country’s economy and the improvement in the general life of it’s citizens as collateral. Or else we should all be looking at Liechtenstein GDP per capita as the gold standard and in that comparison, France is still shyte by your own logic – no?
Lol total biased article. No credibility at all.
Oh so antimodi lobby working day and night, here and there to belittle every effort modi gvt doing to revive economy. Common people believe in him. Propaganda will not work in this case.
Sirji, coffee in france is 1-2 euros per cup. The same quality of coffee in India is 50-100 rupees. Really baseless stuff. France is socialist and they are far ahead in standard of living. Agreed that ppp is a good comparison but even taking a ppp comparison average per capita gdp of an Indian is 1/4 th of that of a French citizen. Check your facts brother. Mere chest thumping isn’t enough to disprove a well researched article.
"They generated a GDP more or less similar to that of India. �What that basically means is that an average Frenchman is much more productive than an average Indian. The per capita income of France in 2017 was $38,476.70 and that of India was $1,939.60. The French per capita income is nearly 20 times India’s. �The poverty of India can also be gleaned from what it takes to be a part of India’s richest 1%." – What about France’s 1%? Do you know how much of France’s wealth they control? If so, then we can also determine what an average French is worth in terms of productivity. When Vivek Kaul get’s his head out of his ass and reply to this question, we can go forward looking at PPP, meaning how much can the average Indian buy to live comfortably vs a French with their 10 Euro per cup of coffee for starts.
What a stupid article that completely belittles the achievements of the current government. Manmohan Singh’s biggest achievement was the 2G scam!! Typical of a sickular liberal to write like this.
As always , bang on target !!!