NEW DELHI: India has become the fourth largest economy in the world due to a strong economic growth but still has a low per capita income, the Economic Survey revealed today.
“India has emerged as the fourth largest economy globally with a high growth rate and has improved its global ranking in terms of per capita income. Yet, the fact remains that its per capita income continues to be quite low,” it said.
“India has moved up the ranks, but is still the poorest among the G-20,” the survey added. The per capita income of India stood at $1,527 in 2011, it said. “…this is perhaps the most visible challenge.
Nevertheless, India has a diverse set of factors, domestic as well as external, that could drive growth well into the future,” the survey said.
Between 1980 and 2010, India achieved a growth of 6.2 per cent, while the world as a whole registered a growth rate of 3.3 per cent. As a result, India’s share in global GDP more than doubled from 2.5 per cent in 1980 to 5.5 per cent in 2010, it said. Consequently, India’s rank in per capita GDP showed an improvement from 117 in 1990 to 101 in 2000 and further to 94 in 2009.
China, however, improved its rank from 127 to 74 during the same period. G-20 or the Group of 20 nations was formed in 1999 after the East Asian crisis as a forum of finance ministers and central bank governors. Meanwhile, the survey said any slowdown in eurozone, which accounts for 19% of the global GDP, could impact the Indian economy. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has forecast that the eurozone is likely to go through a mild recession in 2012.