India can sustain 8% growth over next two decades: Former CEA Krishnamurthy Subramanian
Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], March 9 (ANI): Former Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamurthy Subramanian has expressed confidence that India can sustain an average economic growth rate of around 8 per cent over the next two decades, arguing that policymakers must aim for such expansion if the country is to fully realise its long-term economic potential.
"For a CFO, the top line matters the most," he said, adding that economic growth ultimately determines the scale of opportunities available to businesses.
Subramanian said India now has a historic opportunity to emerge as one of the world's largest economies over the coming decades.
"For the first time in possibly four or five centuries, India has the opportunity to become one of the top two economies in the world. This was not the case ever since the 15th or 16th century," he said, speaking at the FICCI CFO Summit 2026 over the weekend.
"I believe that our policymakers will not be delivering India's potential if they do not deliver 8 per cent growth in real terms on average over the next two decades," he said.
He acknowledged that some critics consider such projections overly optimistic, noting that when he puts such projections on social media, people often say that it seems too optimistic.
"At the height of the COVID pandemic, after a (sharp) decline in GDP in the first lockdown quarter, I predicted a V-shaped recovery for the Indian economy," he said.
Subramanian argued that optimism is a necessary ingredient for economic progress.
"The difference between an economic commentator and an economic leader is in this fundamental belief that for anything good to happen, positive thinking is necessary. For anything bad to happen, negative thinking is sufficient," he said.
He explained that at such growth rates, India would reach around $30,000 in real per capita income over time, which still leaves substantial room for continued economic expansion before the law of diminishing returns begins to kick in.
The first is the continued formalisation of the economy. He noted that a large share of economic activity in India still takes place in the informal sector.
"Even today, and estimates vary, about half of the Indian economy is informal," he said.
The second driver is catch-up growth. Subramanian said that while advanced economies grow by pushing the productivity frontier through innovation, emerging economies like India can grow faster by adopting existing technologies and development models.
The third factor is increasing female labour force participation, which he said has already shown significant improvement in recent years.
"Over the last six years, the labour force participation ratio... has increased from 23 per cent to 42 per cent," he said, citing data from the Periodic Labour Force Survey.
Together, these structural changes, formalisation of the economy, catch-up productivity gains, and rising female labour force participation, and credit growth could support sustained high growth and help India realise its economic potential over the next two decades, he summed up. (ANI)
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