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‘India’s services-led growth more resilient than China’s’

New Delhi, Feb 9 (IANS) India has emerged as the world’s fastest-growing major economy, with robust growth projections indicating that it will outpace several peers in the coming decades, a media report said.

India’s services-led model, powered by technology, finance, digital infrastructure, and professional services, offers notable resilience compared to China’s manufacturing-heavy approach, which faces cyclical vulnerabilities from global trade disruptions and domestic imbalances, according to an article in One World Outlook.

The article states that China’s manufacturing sector drove much of the country’s rise, with its share in GDP hovering around 36-40 per cent in earlier decades before a gradual decline to about 25 per cent in 2025, according to national statistics. This reflects a deliberate shift toward higher-value activities and services (now over 50-57 per cent of GDP), but manufacturing continues as the core engine of exports, employment for over 100 million people, and geopolitical leverage.

China’s export-oriented factories have weathered challenges like US tariffs through diversification to emerging markets, yielding record trade surpluses in 2025. However, this model exposes vulnerabilities: overcapacity, reliance on external demand, property sector slumps, and weak domestic consumption amplify cyclical risks. Industrial output grew solidly in 2025, but investment in manufacturing slowed sharply in the latter half amid trade uncertainties, the article pointed out.

In contrast, India’s services sector has solidified as the dominant driver. In 2024-25, services accounted for approximately 55 per cent of GVA (up from around 51 per cent a decade earlier), with subsectors like financial, real estate, and professional services contributing nearly 23 per cent, and trade, hotels, transport, and communications around 18 per cent.

This services tilt stems from India’s early investments in human capital, English proficiency, enabling explosive growth in IT and business process outsourcing.

The tech industry exemplifies India’s edge. India’s IT-BPM sector generated substantial export revenues, with software services leading growth at around 13-14 per cent annually in recent years. Services exports surged, doubling pre-pandemic growth rates to 14 per cent in FY23-FY25, making India the world’s seventh-largest services exporter (share rising from 2 per cent in 2005 to 4.3 per cent in 2024). Professional consulting and management services grew even faster, at nearly 26 per cent. This export strength provides a stable foreign exchange inflow, cushioning against merchandise trade deficits, the article stated.

Finance and fintech further bolster this resilience. India’s digital infrastructure, particularly the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), has revolutionised transactions. UPI processes billions of transactions monthly, often exceeding 20 billion, with near-zero costs, interoperability, and widespread adoption (over 500 million users). This public-led, open platform contrasts with China’s closed ecosystems dominated by private giants like Alipay and WeChat Pay. UPI’s growth has fueled fintech innovation, financial inclusion, and low-volatility economic activity, enabling seamless digital commerce and reducing informality.

Professional services, including consulting, legal, and advisory, add high-value, tradable components less susceptible to physical supply chain shocks. Unlike manufacturing, which requires massive capital and faces tariff barriers or geopolitical tensions, these services scale via digital delivery, leveraging India’s skilled workforce.

China’s manufacturing model, while powerful for scale and jobs, carries risks: vulnerability to protectionism (e.g., US tariffs), overreliance on investment (leading to imbalances), and slower adaptation to services transitions. India’s approach, though employment-absorptive challenges persist (services create fewer mass jobs than manufacturing), offers adaptability in a digital, knowledge-driven era.

Looking ahead, India’s services dominance positions it well for future growth amid AI, digital transformation, and global demand for tech-enabled solutions. Sustained reforms could further amplify this edge, while China navigates its rebalancing, the article added.

–IANS

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Indian Abroad Newsdesk
Indian Abroad Newsdeskhttps://www.indianabroad.news
Indian Abroad is a news channel and fortnightly newspaper meant for Australia’s Indian community and, besides news, focuses on lifestyle subjects like health, travel, culture, arts, beauty, fashion, entertainment, Bollywood, etc. Our YouTube channel here features daily news bulletins besides infotainment videos on lifestyle subjects.

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