Issues Facing the Indian Economy
The challenges India must overcome — poverty (25.7% rural BPL), jobless growth paradox, inequality (top 10% earns 57%), migration crisis, COVID-19 pandemic impact, and possible remedies.
Banky Faces Reality! 📊
This is the final chapter of Module A — and it’s the most real. Poverty, unemployment, inequality — these aren’t just textbook concepts. They’re the customers who walk into your branch every day. Understanding these issues makes you a banker with empathy AND knowledge.
Why Read This Chapter?
These issues ARE your customers
Exam Marks
2-4 questions — poverty percentages, World Inequality Report numbers, IMF growth projections, COVID recovery timeline. All factual!
Career Growth
Understanding socioeconomic challenges makes you empathetic AND effective — the combination that gets you promoted
Real Life
You’ll understand WHY India has poverty despite being the ‘fastest-growing economy’ — the paradox explained
How Will It Benefit You?
Real career advantages
What Is This Chapter About?
30-second summary
Key Definitions — Banky Asks, Mentor Explains
Every term explained like you’re 10
Banky’s Understanding: Jobless growth = economy grows while maintaining or lowering its employment level. Causes: structural factors, stringent labour laws, reliance on capital-intensive industries instead of labour-intensive ones, knowledge-intensive services driving growth instead of manufacturing. Census 2011: labour force grew at 2.23% but employment grew at only 1.4%. Average GDP growth ~7% but employment growth only 1.8%. Solution: Start-up India, Stand-up India, reform education, promote labour-intensive industries (food processing, textiles).
Banky’s Understanding: As per Planning Commission 2011-12 estimates: 25.7% of rural population and 13.7% of urban population were below the poverty line. Rural poverty is higher due to lack of infrastructure, inadequate food supply, and weak labour market. Government runs multiple poverty alleviation programmes: IRDP, JGSY, MGNREGA, National Food Security Mission, PM Jan Dhan Yojana, PM Garib Kalyan Yojana, PM SVANidhi.
Banky’s Understanding: As per World Inequality Report (2022): India is one of the world’s most unequal countries. Top 10% earns 57% of national income. Top 1% earns 22%. Bottom 50% earns only 13%. As per Oxfam: top 10% controls 77% of total national wealth. In 2017, the wealthiest 1% received 73% of wealth generated while bottom half saw only 1% increase. Inequality worsened especially after 1991 reforms. COVID amplified it further.
Banky’s Understanding: Migration = movement of people from one location to another for better economic possibilities. Influenced by social, political, cultural, environmental, health, and education factors. Out-migration is driven by environmental pressures (drought, floods). In-migration causes overexploitation of resources at destination. COVID-19 exposed migration’s fragility — millions of migrant workers walked hundreds of kilometres home during lockdown.
Banky’s Understanding: COVID-19 took a significant toll on livelihoods and production. India’s GDP contracted -6.6% in FY21, then recovered +8.7% in FY22. But the virus altered demand dynamics, caused supply bottlenecks, reduced workforce participation. RBI’s Report on Currency and Finance 2021-22 estimates: India will take more than 13 years to recover from COVID losses — by FY 2034-35. The post-pandemic ‘new normal’ will be very different.
Banky’s Understanding: India GDP: -6.6% (FY21) → +8.7% (FY22). IMF WEO April 2022: projected 8.9% for FY23, then 6.9% for FY24. World Bank: 8.7% (FY23), 6.8% (FY24). India = world’s fastest-growing major economy in 2022 (IMF). But key issues persist: weak demand, rising COVID infections, chronic unemployment, wealth disparities, infrastructure bottlenecks, agriculture overdependence, rising government debt.
Chapter Explained in Simple Stories
So easy even Banky’s nephew understands
💸 Block 1: India’s Great Paradox — Growing Economy, Growing Poverty
Here’s the mind-bending question: How can a country growing at 8.7% still have 25.7% rural poverty?
The answer is jobless growth. India’s GDP grows because of IT, finance, and capital-intensive industries — but these don’t create enough JOBS for the masses. Census 2011: labour force grew at 2.23% but employment at only 1.4%. The growth goes to factories with robots, software companies with few employees, and financial services — not to the 54.6% working in agriculture.
Meanwhile, inequality explodes: the top 10% grabs 57% of national income. The bottom 50% gets just 13%. As Oxfam reported: the top 1% received 73% of new wealth in 2017, while the bottom half saw only 1% increase. COVID made it worse — scarred the labour market, widened educational gaps, and amplified income inequality.
🏃 Block 2: Migration — When Millions Walk Home
Remember the heartbreaking images during COVID lockdown? Millions of migrant workers walking hundreds of kilometres to reach their home villages — no transport, no food, no money. That’s migration exposed.
Migration is driven by the push-pull model: villages PUSH people out (no jobs, drought, poor infrastructure) and cities PULL them in (factories, construction, services). India’s cities generate 2/3 of GDP with 1/3 of population (Chapter 5) — that’s the pull.
But migration creates problems too: overcrowded cities, pressure on urban infrastructure, environmental degradation at both source and destination. Climate change worsens migration — droughts and floods force farmers to abandon land. The solution? Rural development, decentralised industrialisation, and satellite city development — so people don’t NEED to migrate.
🦠 Block 3: Post-COVID — The 13-Year Recovery Road
COVID hit India hard: GDP crashed -6.6% in FY21. Then bounced back +8.7% in FY22. IMF projected 8.9% for FY23. Sounds great? But here’s the catch:
RBI’s Report on Currency and Finance 2021-22 says: India will take MORE THAN 13 YEARS to fully recover from COVID losses — by FY 2034-35. Why so long? Because the pandemic didn’t just slow growth temporarily — it destroyed production capacity, reduced workforce participation, altered demand patterns, and created supply chain bottlenecks that persist.
Remedies being implemented: Government’s fiscal support to vulnerable groups, RBI’s easy monetary policy, Start-up India for job creation, labour law reforms, investment in healthcare (PM-ABHIM), education reform (NEP), and progressive taxation to reduce inequality.
Exam Angle — Every Testable Point
All facts, numbers, definitions JAIIB tests
✅ Must-Know Facts — Highest Probability
- India GDP FY21: -6.6% (contraction) | FY22: +8.7% (recovery)
- IMF WEO April 2022: India projected 8.9% for FY23, 6.9% for FY24
- India = world’s fastest-growing major economy in 2022 (IMF)
- COVID recovery: RBI estimates India to offset losses by FY 2034-35 (13+ years)
- Poverty line 2011-12 (Planning Commission): 25.7% rural + 13.7% urban below poverty line
- Rural poverty is HIGHER than urban poverty
- Key poverty programmes: MGNREGA, IRDP, JGSY, PM Jan Dhan, PM Garib Kalyan Yojana, PM SVANidhi
- Jobless growth: economy grows but employment doesn’t keep pace
- Census 2011: labour force growth 2.23% vs employment growth 1.4%
- Average GDP growth ~7% but employment growth only 1.8% — massive gap
- Jobless growth causes: structural factors, stringent labour laws, capital-intensive industries, knowledge services
- Solution: Start-up India, Stand-up India, education reform, labour-intensive industries
- World Inequality Report 2022: India = one of world’s MOST unequal countries
- Top 10% earns 57% of national income | Top 1% earns 22%
- Bottom 50% earns only 13% of national income
- Oxfam: Top 10% controls 77% of total national wealth
- 2017: wealthiest 1% received 73% of new wealth | bottom half got only 1% increase
- Inequality worsened especially after 1991 reforms and further after COVID
- Migration: movement for better economic possibilities — influenced by social/political/environmental factors
- COVID pandemic: supply bottlenecks, reduced workforce participation, new virus variant risks
- RBI supports growth through demand side factors (not supply side)
📝 Previous Year Questions
Memory Tricks That STICK
Lock every fact permanently
🧠 Trick 1 — Poverty Split
🧠 Trick 2 — Inequality Numbers
🧠 Trick 3 — COVID Recovery
🧠 Trick 4 — Jobless Growth Gap
🧠 Trick 5 — India Fastest Growing
🧠 Trick 6 — GDP Bounce
🧠 Trick 7 — Oxfam Wealth Stat
🧠 Trick 8 — RBI = Demand Side
Visual Summary — Chapter Map
Entire chapter in one diagram
Flash Revision — Last-Minute Cards
Read these 10 minutes before exam
⚡ Chapter 11 Complete — Issues Facing Indian Economy
- India GDP: -6.6% (FY21) → +8.7% (FY22) | Fastest-growing major economy (IMF 2022)
- COVID recovery: 13+ years → by FY 2034-35 (RBI estimate)
- Poverty: Rural 25.7% + Urban 13.7% below poverty line (Planning Commission 2011-12)
- Jobless growth: GDP ~7% but employment only 1.8% — nearly 4× gap
- Inequality: Top 10% earns 57% | Top 1% earns 22% | Bottom 50% gets only 13%
- Oxfam: Top 10% controls 77% of total wealth | COVID worsened inequality further
- Migration: push-pull model — villages push, cities pull | COVID exposed migrant crisis
- RBI supports growth through demand side factors (rate cuts, liquidity, easy monetary policy)
- Remedies: Start-up India, labour reform, healthcare (PM-ABHIM), education (NEP), progressive taxation
- MODULE A COMPLETE! 11 chapters covering India’s economic journey from 1000 AD to 2030 SDGs 🎉
Banky says: “MODULE A COMPLETE! 11 chapters, 100+ definitions, 80+ memory tricks — I’m READY for JAIIB!” 🎉🏆
You’ve travelled from India’s ancient economic glory (1000 AD) through British colonialism, Five Year Plans, 1991 reforms, globalisation, international organizations, climate change, and finally the challenges we face today. EVERY concept is locked in. Module A = CONQUERED. On to Module B — Economic Concepts Related to Banking! 💪🔥🇮🇳