An Overview of Indian Economy
From 23% of world GDP to 3% under British rule — and back to 3rd largest economy by PPP. India’s economic story is your story as a banker.
Meet Banky — That’s YOU! 👋
Banky is a fresh banker — excited, curious, and full of questions. Your mentor explains everything simply — like a story to a 10-year-old. Let’s go, Banky!
Banky’s First Day Question — Why Study This?
Why this chapter matters in your daily banking life
Banky’s confusion on Day 1 — “Why does economy matter for my banking job?”
Daily Banking Need
Every RBI circular, interest rate change, and government scheme your bank follows comes from the Indian economy. This chapter tells you WHY things happen.
Career Growth
Officers who understand economic trends make better credit decisions. This knowledge fast-tracks you from counter staff to branch manager.
Easy JAIIB Marks
2–4 direct questions from this chapter in every exam. These are the easiest marks available — don’t leave them on the table!
Banky’s Story in 3 Acts — India’s Economic Journey
The entire chapter told as a story — impossible to forget
India’s economic story in 3 acts — from Golden Bird to World’s 3rd Largest Economy
🌟 Act 1 — The Golden Bird
India was called “Sone ki Chidiya” for good reason. In 1000 AD, India + China = 50.5% of world GDP. India alone had 23% GDP share and 33% trade share in 1600 AD. We were one of the richest civilisations on earth.
💔 Act 2 — The British Drain
Britain didn’t come to help — they came to drain. They destroyed industries (deindustrialisation), imposed unfair taxes (Zamindari, Ryotwari), sent money back as “Home Charges”. By 1947 — India’s GDP share fell to just 3%.
🚀 Act 3 — The Comeback
Five Year Plans started recovery. 1991 LPG Reforms changed everything — 8.6% growth by 2002-2007. COVID hit hard (−23.8% in Q1 2020), but we bounced back with 8.7% growth in 2021-22. Today India is the world’s 3rd largest economy by PPP!
Banky Asks — Mentor Explains
Key terms so simple even a 10-year-old gets it
GDP vs GNI vs Per Capita — what each means and how India fits in
GDP is the total value of all goods and services produced within India’s borders in a year — factories, hospitals, schools, software, food — everything. It does not matter if the producer is Indian or foreign. If it happened on Indian soil, it counts. India’s GDP in 2021-22 stood at ₹147.36 lakh crore at constant 2011-12 prices — one of the fastest recoveries post-COVID among major economies.
PPP compares economies not by exchange rates but by what money can actually buy. A meal that costs $10 in the USA costs ₹80 in India — not ₹800 (the exchange rate equivalent). By this real-world buying power measure, India is the 3rd largest economy in the world — after USA and China (IMF WEO April 2022). This is why India’s economic strength is far greater than it looks on paper.
Per Capita Income = National Income ÷ Population. India’s PCI in 2019 was $1,891 — placing India in the World Bank’s Lower-Middle Income category (PCI between $996 and $3,895). The low PCI is not because India earns less — it is because 140 crore people share the same income. High population dilutes per capita figures significantly. This is a critical distinction examiners test.
Term coined by Prof. Raj Krishna in 1978 to describe India’s disappointingly low annual growth rate of around 3.5% from the 1950s through to the 1980s. Per capita income grew at only 1.3% during this period. The term was used to highlight that India was growing far too slowly to lift its massive poor population out of poverty. The 6th Five Year Plan (1980-85) finally broke this pattern with higher government spending and liberalised import policies.
The landmark 1991 economic reforms triggered by India’s balance of payments crisis. Liberalisation removed restrictions on businesses and industries. Privatisation allowed private companies to enter sectors previously reserved for the government. Globalisation opened India to foreign trade, investment and technology. Post-1991, India’s GDP grew at 6.7% (8th Plan), and reached 8.6% annually between 2002-2007 — making it the world’s 2nd fastest growing economy after China.
During direct British rule (1858-1947), Home Charges were official financial transfers from India to the United Kingdom. These included: East India Company shareholder dividends, interest on loans raised in England, expenses of British army stationed in India, pensions of retired British officers, guaranteed interest to railway companies, and the Secretary of State’s salary. By the 1930s, these charges were £40-50 million per year. Dadabhai Naoroji calculated India paid Britain £10 crore between 1829 and 1865 alone.
Quick Reference Cards:
GDP — Gross Domestic Product
Total value of all goods and services produced inside India. Chairs, phones, haircuts, hospitals — add it all up = GDP. India 2021-22 GDP: ₹147.36 lakh crore at constant 2011-12 prices.
PPP — Purchasing Power Parity
Compares economies based on buying power, not exchange rates. ₹100 buys way more in India than $1.25 does in USA. By PPP, India is the 3rd largest economy in the world!
Per Capita Income (PCI)
Total income ÷ Population. India’s PCI in 2019 was $1,891 placing us in “Lower Middle Income” category. Low because population is 140 crore sharing the same income pie!
Hindu Rate of Growth
Term coined by Prof. Raj Krishna in 1978. India grew at only 3.5% per year from 1950s–1980s while per capita income grew just 1.3%. The 6th Five Year Plan finally broke this curse.
LPG Reforms — 1991
Liberalisation (removed business restrictions) + Privatisation (allowed private companies) + Globalisation (opened to foreign trade). This 1991 reform transformed India from a closed to open economy.
Home Charges (1858–1947)
Official transfers from India to UK during direct British rule. Included: Company dividends, army costs, British officer pensions, railway interest. By 1930s, these were £40–50 million per year!
Banky’s Exam Survival Kit
Everything JAIIB actually asks — straight from past exams
✅ Must-Know Facts — High Probability in Exam
- India’s PPP rank: 3rd in world — after USA & China (IMF WEO April 2022)
- India + China 1000 AD: 50.5% of global GDP (Angus Maddison database)
- India’s 1600 AD share: 23% world GDP + 33% global trade
- By 1947 (British left): Both GDP and trade share fell to just 3%
- World Bank India category: Lower-Middle Income (PCI $996–$3,895)
- India’s PCI in 2019: $1,891
- Hindu Rate of Growth: ~3.5% per year | Coined by Prof. Raj Krishna in 1978
- LPG Reforms: 1991 — post balance of payments crisis
- Growth 2002–2007: 8.6% per year — world’s 2nd fastest after China
- COVID Q1 2020-21: GDP contracted by 23.8% — worst ever quarter
- Full year 2020-21: −6.6% contraction
- GDP growth 2021-22: +8.7% (recovery)
- Services share 2020-21: 60.9% | Agriculture 20.1% | Industry 19.8%
- Services crossed Agriculture: 1980-81 (Services 38% vs Agriculture 36.1%)
- First national income estimate: Dadabhai Naoroji — “Poverty and Un-British Rule in India” 1867-68
- COVID recovery timeline (RBI): India to offset losses by 2034-35 (12 years)
📝 Actual Previous Year Questions
Banky’s Brain Hacks — Memory Tricks
6 tricks you’ll never forget — guaranteed!
6 memory hooks wired into Banky’s brain — each trick makes a number unforgettable
Trick 1 — India’s GDP Fall Under British
Trick 2 — Hindu Rate of Growth
Trick 3 — LPG Reforms Year
Trick 4 — India’s PPP World Rank
Trick 5 — Services Crossed Agriculture
Trick 6 — World Bank 4 Categories
Banky’s Big Picture — The Visual Diagram
India’s complete economic timeline in one powerful image
India’s complete economic journey — from 3.5% Hindu Rate of Growth to 8.7% post-COVID recovery
Banky’s Last-Minute Flash Cards
Read this 10 minutes before the exam — covers everything!
Banky’s 1-Page Power Summary
The complete chapter — one screen, exam-ready
⚡ Chapter 1 Complete — An Overview of Indian Economy
- India had 23% world GDP share in 1600 AD and 33% of global trade — one of richest civilisations
- British colonialism reduced India’s share to just 3% GDP and 3% trade by 1947
- British drained India via: Home Charges (1858-1947), Deindustrialisation, Zamindari taxes, Wealth Drain
- World Bank classifies India as Lower-Middle Income Economy — PCI range $996 to $3,895
- India’s Per Capita Income in 2019: $1,891 | Low due to large population of 140 crore
- 1950–1980: “Hindu Rate of Growth” — 3.5% avg growth — coined by Prof. Raj Krishna (1978)
- 1980-81: Services sector (38%) overtook Agriculture (36.1%) as largest GDP contributor for first time
- 1991: LPG Reforms (Liberalisation + Privatisation + Globalisation) transformed India
- 2002–2007: India grew at 8.6% per year — World’s 2nd fastest economy after China
- COVID Q1 2020-21: GDP contracted 23.8% — worst ever | Full year 2020-21: −6.6%
- Recovery 2021-22: GDP grew +8.7% | Nominal GDP reached ₹236.65 lakh crore
- 2020-21 sector split: Services 60.9% | Agriculture 20.1% | Industry 19.8%
- India PPP rank: 3rd globally (USA → China → India) — IMF World Economic Outlook April 2022
- Dadabhai Naoroji wrote first national income estimate (1867-68) — National Income: ₹340 crore
- RBI estimate: India to offset COVID losses by 2034-35 — approximately 12 years from pandemic
Banky says: “I ACTUALLY understood this! 🎉 No more confusion!”
You now know India’s full economic story — from Golden Bird to 3rd largest economy. Every number, every date, every trick is locked in your brain. Go get that JAIIB increment, Banky! 💪