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India@100

Reaping the demographic dividend

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Size and age of workforce of India will play a significant role in its economic growth in the coming years. 


In brief

  • Share of India’s working age population to total population will reach its highest level at 68.9% by 2030.
  • By the year 2030, India’s dependency ratio is projected to reach its lowest point at 31.2%.
  • With a relatively young population (median age of 28.4 years), India not only gets a competitive advantage in terms of workforce but also an opportunity to unleash the consumption power of a young population. 

In absolute numbers, India will have 1.04b working age persons by 2030. Correspondingly, India’s dependency ratio would be the lowest in its history by 2030 at 31.2%. India’s young dependency ratio —the number of children below 15 years of age relative to total population — is expected to overtake the old dependency ratio (ratio of population aged above 65 years relative to total population) by 2056.  

India would remain the largest provider of human resources in the world. About 24.3% of the incremental global workforce over the next decade will come from India. This is significant considering the rapidly ageing population in the developed world, creating potential challenges to labor supply in various sectors of the global economy.

 

The fact that India has a relatively young population with a median age of 28.4 years is equally important. Approximately 26% of the population is below 14 years and ~67% is between the age of 15 to 64 years and 7% above the age of 65. In contrast, the population over 65 years in US is ~17% and Europe is over ~21%.

 

The potential contribution of the growing population to India’s GDP growth would depend, among other factors, on the rate of growth and size of total population and its contribution to the size of working age population who may be absorbed in productive employment.

 

This young population not only reinforces India’s competitive advantage in the services and manufacturing sectors, but also unleashes the consumption power of a young population towards discretionary expenditure.

India’s working population

Greater women’s participation in the workforce will increase the size of the labor force

Labor Force Participation Rate (LFPR) for females which has declined for the past few years is expected to grow. Nearly 49% of the total enrolment in higher education comprised female students. With this rising trend, India should expect a much larger proportion of women’s participation in the workforce in the years to come.

Defining opportunities

India’s success in exporting IT and BPO services is a good example of how India has leveraged its demographic advantage. It has the largest pool of graduates with a Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) background, which is English speaking, giving India a differentiator vis-à-vis other geographies. The annual increase to this pool is estimated at 2.14 million graduates and India is also the global leader in STEM women graduates at 47.1%.

India’s large pool of working-age population therefore provides a skill-based talent to address the needs in India and globally. Added to this is the ability to support a competitive manufacturing opportunity in India to address the global supply chain and the domestic consumption market.

Other sectors that may accommodate this population include construction, public services, labor intensive manufacturing, services such as trade, transport and tourism, e-commerce, and other utility services in urban centers. These are the sectors where unskilled and semiskilled labor can easily be deployed.

Alongside, it is also critical to ensure that the working age population in general, is suitably educated and skilled for jobs of the future.

Purchasing power of over a billion people has driven economic growth

Increased consumption has underpinned the economic growth over the last decade. Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE) has grown at a CAGR of 11.3% (in nominal terms) over the last 10 years as against a nominal GDP growth rate of 10.6%. The ratio of PFCE to GDP has increased from 55% to 60%.

While incomes have a direct correlation with consumption, there are a various structural changes driving the Indian consumption story.  With continued macro-economic growth and growing population, consumption expenditure is expected to continue to grow at high rates and an important driver of economic growth.

Increasing uptake of consumer credit ecosystem and increased financial inclusion

Indian consumers are gradually opening up to credit driven consumption. The uptake in credit from scheduled commercial banks underscores this trend. From 2016-17 to 2021-22, outstanding personal loans of scheduled commercial banks more than doubled from INR 16.2t to INR 33.85t (~ US$ 423b).

The country has witnessed a strong wave of financial inclusion through the Government’s thrust on bank accounts and investments to build digital payments infrastructure. The formalization of the economy through digitalization of payment systems provides an avenue for better credit assessment of citizens who in the past may not have been eligible for consumer loans. As the financial services sector develops and augments these solutions, credit to households would only increase, further fueling the consumption story.

Summary

The size and age of a country’s workforce plays a huge role in its economic growth, and when complemented by new-age skills and a strong entrepreneurial spirit would define the country’s progress.

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