India Needs 75 Years To Reach Just 25% Of US GDP: World Bank Report 2024
6 replies8 likes
Muttu Havalagi
Stealth • 2m
🚨India's GDP grows by 6.7 per cent in April-June quarter this fiscal against 8.2 per cent a year ago
1 replies14 likes
Nawal
•
SELF • 5m
‼️ Why they even make such a weird comments on GDP , why not talk about per capita income ?
What's your views guys , how big Indian GDP can be ?
2 replies4 likes
Sahil Shaikh
Stealth • 5m
The country that does not respect and value time may become rich in GDP terms but will remain poor in per capita income forever.
0 replies4 likes
Mahendra Lochhab
Stealth • 3m
India's per capita paint consumption is only 3.8 liters, compared to a global average of 15 liters. That's a whopping 75% less! Plus, the price per liter in India is 61% lower than the global average.
Unfiltered thoughts (5/5)
There are 3 types of India:
India-1
~Population of 110 Mn
~Per capita income of $10k
~Buys from Flipkart, watch Netflix, drink Starbucks coffee
~Contributes to 40% of India GDP
~Fluent with English
~35Mn credit card users
Germany is way ahead than India than You Think‼️
The news and social media has ruined the minds of people and somewhat brainwashed them by not revealing the truth. No doubt India is 5th largest economy but in top 10 economy list India has the lowest
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27 replies16 likes
Annonimos
Stealth • 2m
As a report
India GDP is 3.385 trillion
With an average growth of 7 percent
GDP per capita is 2375 dollars
Is this GDP of our contry includes all MSME and small enterprises where the artifact's,decorative items,etc which are created in tire 2 and
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10 replies8 likes
Annonimos
Stealth • 2m
Hey is that you know I what way india grown before and after liberalisation
Here's some information about India's growth rate before and after economic liberalization:
1980s
India's growth rate was higher than the previous decades, but it was als
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6 replies10 likes
Sanskar Agarwal
Stealth • 3m
🌍 India and China: The Middle-Income Trap Challenge
The recent World Development Report 2024 by the World Bank sheds light on a crucial issue: the "middle-income trap." This is a scenario where countries, after reaching a certain level of economic