India Elections
What to Know Federal-State Tensions 5 Takeaways on the Modi Economy The Lucrative Business of Politics
Advertisement
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
{"uid":"1","hostPeerName":"https://www.nytimes.com","initialGeometry":"{\"windowCoords_t\":9,\"windowCoords_r\":1060,\"windowCoords_b\":815,\"windowCoords_l\":9,\"frameCoords_t\":146.1999969482422,\"frameCoords_r\":1019,\"frameCoords_b\":146.1999969482422,\"frameCoords_l\":0,\"styleZIndex\":\"auto\",\"allowedExpansion_t\":146.1999969482422,\"allowedExpansion_r\":0,\"allowedExpansion_b\":528.8000030517578,\"allowedExpansion_l\":0,\"xInView\":0,\"yInView\":0}","permissions":"{\"expandByOverlay\":false,\"expandByPush\":false,\"readCookie\":false,\"writeCookie\":false}","metadata":"{\"shared\":{\"sf_ver\":\"1-0-40\",\"ck_on\":1,\"flash_ver\":\"0\"}}","reportCreativeGeometry":true,"isDifferentSourceWindow":false,"goog_safeframe_hlt":{}}" scrolling="no" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" width="0" height="270" data-is-safeframe="true" sandbox="allow-forms allow-popups allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation" aria-label="Advertisement" tabindex="0" data-google-container-id="1" style="border: 0px; vertical-align: bottom; min-width: 100%;">
Supported by
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
What 10 Years of Modi Rule Has Meant for India’s Economy
Narendra Modi has kept India on its swift upward path among the world’s largest economies. Many Indians are better off, though wealth gaps have widened.
Share full article
Read in app
Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a rally of his political party. After 10 years in office, he stands to win another term in elections that start in April. Credit...Mahesh Kumar A./Associated Press
By Alex Travelli
Alex Travelli, the South Asia business correspondent, has reported from New Delhi since 2013.
April 1, 2024Updated 12:16 a.m. ET
Get it sent to your inbox.
As Narendra Modi was storming to victory in the election of 2014, he said that “acchhe din aane waale hain” — good times are coming.
Now as Mr. Modi stands set to secure another term as prime minister in elections starting on April 19, the value of India’s stock market has grown threefold since he first took office. India’s economy is almost twice as big as it was.
Stocks have risen so much because the number of Indians with enough wealth and appetite for investment risk has jumped — to nearly 5 percent of the population from barely 2 percent.
But the economic gains have been widely unequal. The bulk of India’s growth depends on those at the top of the income ladder, including a coterie of huge and tightly controlled businesses.
Advertisement
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Ninety percent of India’s population of 1.4 billion is estimated to subsist on less than $3,500 a year. Yet in the poorest rural districts, life has been made more bearable by welfare programs that have expanded under Mr. Modi. Many of the benefits are solid and visible: sacks of free grain, toilets, gas cylinders and housing materials. Purely commercial developments have transformed village life: LED lights, cheap smartphones and nearly free mobile data have changed the nature of idle time.
While America was experiencing a “vibecession,” feeling glum despite upbeat economic news, India has been doing the opposite. Here many of the signals are mixed — but the vibes are fantastic. International surveys show India’s consumers have become the most upbeat anywhere.
Subscribe to The Times to read as many articles as you like.
Alex Travelli is a correspondent for The Times based in New Delhi, covering business and economic matters in India and the rest of South Asia. He previously worked as an editor and correspondent for The Economist. More about Alex Travelli
Share full article
Read in app
Advertisement
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT