Infographics English
Infographics English
2023-24
HIGHLIGHTS
The ‘Highlights’ document of the Economic Survey 2023-24 features the salient aspects of each of
the thirteen chapters in the Survey, assembled chapter-wise. The highlights are stated through charts,
infographics, tables, and minimum use of text, which limits the size of the document to 30-35 pages.
The ‘Highlights’ document thus presents the Survey in a nutshell to enable its easier understanding. I
am hopeful that readers will be able to relate to the ‘Highlights’ document and be motivated to locate
relevant content in the Survey for deeper study.
V. Anantha Nageswaran
Chief Economic Adviser
Ministry of Finance
Government of India
Contents
3.5
1.9
World
World Output
Output Advanced Economies Emerging
Advanced Economies Market
Emerging and and
Market
Developing Economies
Developing Economies
Global Inflation
Recurring disruptions Increase in services
8.7% dampen global trade partly offset the
merchandise trade contraction of goods
6.8% volume growth trade
3
India’s GDP growth expected to remain robust. Steady private consumption and emerging
investment drive growth
9.7 Exports
Exports – –
8.2 7.0 21.9%
21.9%
7.0
6.5
3.9
Per cent
Investment
Investment ––
Forecast
30.8%
30.8%
-5.8
Private
Private
consumption
consumption - -
FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 FY24 FY25 (F) 60.3%
60.3%
(2nd RE) (1st RE) (PE)
Investment being driven by public and private capex with households also pitching in
Government capex crowding in private investment Increasing appetite for investment in housing
Household savings in
physical assets as % of
GDP up from 10.8%
Private Centre in FY21 to 12.9% in
corporate and States’ FY23
21% 12%
79%
FY21 88%
FY24
4
Relatively low domestic inflation, high growth and stable external sector are imparting
resilience to the economy
India a high-growth and low-inflation economy The ₹ was one of the most stable currencies over
Apr’23 – Jun’24
9
British Pound -1.4
India
(Avg. Growth - FY22 - FY24,%)
8
Mexican Peso 1.3
7
Indian Rupee 1.9
6
UK Mexico Euro 2.6
5 EMDEs
Chinese Renmimbi 5.0
4
US Brazil Brazilian Real 10.1
3 Russia
AEs
2
Indonesian Rupiah 11.3
Germany
1 Japanese Yen 18.1
0
4 6 8 10 Depreciation (-)/Appreciation (+) (per
(Avg. Inflation - FY22 - FY24,%) cent)
FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 FY24*
Heightened Macro-vulnerability Macro-stability Pandemic & Global
Disturbance
11.7 11.6
10.3
6.9
Crore
Beneficiaries under
2.6 various schemes
since their
inception
Swacch Bharat Jal Jeevan PM Ujjwala Ayushman PM-AWAS
Mission (Toilets Mission (tap Yojana (gas Bharat Scheme Yojana (pucca
built) water connections (Hospital houses built)
connections) provided) admissions)
5
Monetary Management and Financial
intermediation: Stability is the Watchword
Double-digit growth in bank credit
164.3
Gross bank credit (₹ lakh 136.8 20.2%
118.9 growth
15%
crore)
Microfinance Institutions (MFIs): facilitating Financial Inclusion
0.3
0.4 Rise in RBI’s Financial Inclusion Index from
60.1 in March 2023 to 64.2 in March 2024
indicates improvement in access, usage, and
quality of the financial sector in India
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY19
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
6
GIFT City: Emerging as a dominant gateway for India’s financial sector
Indian capital markets emerged as one of the best-performing among emerging markets in FY24
Systematic
Primary Secondary Market Mutual funds Investment
markets markets capitalisation Plan
7
Prices and Inflation: Under Control
India’s inflation lower than EMDEs in 2023 India has one of the lowest average deviations
(2021-2023) from inflation target (Actual – Target)
12 World AEs
EMDEs India S. Africa 1.3
10 1.8
India
8.3 France 2.6
8
6.2 Mexico 3.4
Per cent
6.8
6 USA 3.6
5.2 5.4
Brazil 3.9
4 4.6
3.2 Germany 4.0
2 UK 4.3
0.7 Russia 4.8
0
2020 2021 2022 2023 Per cent
6
Per cent
5.4
4
4.3
2
0
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
6.5
7.1 Co
) 6.25 FEB-23 re
i
at e (% 5.9
nfl
ati
p oR DEC-22
5.1 on
Re 5.4
SEP-22 (%
4.9 )
AUG-22
4.4 3.2
JUN-22
4 MAY-22
. 3.1
MAY-20
8
Stock monitoring of Subsidised sale of
Export Prohibi- cereals and pulses cereals, pulses and
tion on cereals, onion
onion and sugar
Reduction of import
Lowered LPG duty on pulses and
and fuel prices edible oil
U TY
RT D
IMPO
ADMINISTRATIVE MEASURES TO
CONTAIN INFLATION
Decrease in LPG inflation due to Decline in petrol and diesel inflation due
price cut to price reduction
20 petrol for vehicle diesel for vehicle
2
10
0 0
Per cent
Per cent
-10
-2
-20
-30 -4
Sep-23
Nov-23
Feb-24
Dec-23
May-24
Jun-24
Apr-23
Oct-23
Apr-24
Apr-24
Oct-23
Jan-24
Mar-24
Jun-23
Aug-23
Dec-23
Feb-24
Jun-24
9
Rural-urban inflation gap in selected states in FY24
Per cent
5
4
3
2
y = 1.7646+3.4454x
1
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6
Ratio of rural to urban inflation rate
*The scatter plot is based on 23 major states and NCT of Delhi
A decline in global commodity prices bodes well for India’s inflation outlook
140
120
Index
100
80
60
40
Source : IMF
Total Food Energy Oils and Meals Fertilisers Base Metals
10
External Sector: Stability Amid Plenty
2015-2023
2023-2028*
* Projections by PwC
Revenue: USD 900 crore No. of GCC units: 3,200
11
How can India benefit from China plus one strategy?
USD billion
2022 40.3
2000 27.8
Policy priorities
12
Stable external sector
USD billion
400
Per cent
Decline in External debt to 300
GDP ratio 10
200
100
0 0
2023 PR
2017
2022 R
2015
2016
2018
2019
2020
2021
2024 P
India 68
China
Mexico
Japan
Brazil India witnessed the most significant
Taiwan increase in foreign exchange reserves
Hong Kong holdings in FY24
South Korea
Russia
Switzerland
Change in foreign exchange reserves from April 2023 to March 2024
(USD billion)
42.2 44.1
36.1
22.1
USD billion
-16.8
FY20
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY19
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
Current account balance as % of
0.9
0.6
-0.2
Current account surplus in Q4
GDP
-1.1 -1.0
-1.3 -1.3
-1.6
-2.1 -2.0 of FY24 led to a moderation in
-2.7
CAD in FY24
-3.8
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
FY22 FY23 FY24
13
Medium Term Outlook: A Growth Vision
for New India
Growth Strategy for Amrit Kaal : Strong, Sustainable and Inclusive
Generate
Improve the quality productive
of health of India’s employment Address the
young population skill-gap
challenge
Tackle
inequality
Policy focus Tap into the full
for the short to potential of the
agriculture sector
Deepen the
corporate bond
medium-term
market
Ease regulatory
requirements and
Navigate the financing bottlenecks
Chinese conundrum for MSMEs
Manage India’s
green transition
14
Climate Change and Energy Transition:
Dealing with Trade-Offs
Present Status of India’s Climate Action
Solar
82.64 GW, 19%
Bio Coal
10.95 GW, 2% 210.97 GW, 48%
Wind
46.16 GW, 10%
Small Hydro
5 GW, 1% Gas
24.82 GW, 6%
Large Hydro,
46.93, 11%
Nuclear, 8.18, Diesel Lignite, 6.62, 1%
2% 0.59 GW, 0%
15
PM-Surya Ghar Yojana
AC @ 24 campaign
16
Social Sector: Benefits that Empower
Saturation
approach: no one
left behind
Technology Focus on
for efficiency empowerment
Transformed
Approach to
Welfare
Cost-effective Basic
& fiscally necessities
sustainable first
Community and
Private
participation
Labour force
participation
Access to Education
basic and
necessities Skilling
Health Financial
and inclusion &
nutrition SHG
movement
Globally, one out of every two people Need for adequate personnel,
will develop a mental health disorder breaking the stigma,
in their lifetime** community action
Mental Health
*National Mental Health Survey 2015-16
**McGrath et al., 2023
17
Employment and Skill Development:
Towards Quality
Evolving Landscape of Jobs
70
60 57.9 56.0
49.8
50 46.8
40
per cent
30
20
10 6.0
3.2
0
2017-18
2018-19
2019-20
2020-21
2021-22
2022-23
2017-18
2018-19
2019-20
2020-21
2021-22
2022-23
2017-18
2018-19
2019-20
2020-21
2021-22
2022-23
LFPR WPR UR
Source: Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) annual reports. MoSPI
Note: LFPR: labour force participation rate, WPR: worker population ratio, UR: unemployment rate
18
Upscaling of Factories and rising Organised Manufacturing Employment
4.8%
3.9%
0.4%
50
40
30
20
10
0
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
India’s agricultural sector shows resilience and Fixing MSP at one and half times the all-India
diverse growth, with notable improvements in weighted average cost of production- assuring
fishing and aquaculture over recent years. remunerative prices to farmers
18 14000
16
12000
14
10000
12
10
8000
Rs/Quintal
8
Per cent
6000
6
4 4000
2
2000
0
2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 2021-22 2022-23
0
-2
Paddy
Masur
Bajra
Soyabean
Ragi
Arhar
Gram
Cotton
Wheat
-4
0.0
Growth in the livestock 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 2021-22 2022-23
sector significantly Crops Livestock Fishing Forestry
boosted the per capita
availability of milk, eggs, Growth in selected products
and meat. 16.00
14.00
12.00
10.00
in per cent
20
Industry: Small and Medium Matters
20
15
12.2
9.5
10
5
2.1
-0.4
0
-1.4
-5
-10
FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 FY24
Mining & quarrying Manufacturing Electricity, gas & other utilities Construction Industry
Coal: production
accelerated
reducing import India, a net exporter of finished steel in 4 out of last
5 years (metric tonnes)
dependence
Steel: highest
production and
consumption in
FY24
21
Surge in electronics production and Strong growth in auto manufacturing
exports (growth in %) in FY 24
7.1%
16.0%
10.3%
R&D spend in
drugs &
pharmaceuticals was
5% of sales
turnover in FY20 India’s
Need to increase & FY21 pharmaceutical
R &D channels of
funding from venture market is the world’s
capital and angel third-largest by
investors volume
Pharmacy
of the
World
8 of the top 20
Higher R&D is
global generic
required to promote
companies based in
innovation
India
More than 12500
Janaushadhi Kendras
opened, covering all
districts
Employment
Over ₹1.28 lakh
generation
Crore of
(direct & indirect)
investment
of over ₹8.5 lakh.
22
MSME: Guarantees approved under CGTMSE increased considerably
23
Services: Fuelling Growth Opportunities
ϴϲ͘ϳ
(constant prices)
in ₹ lakh crore
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY13
FY14
FY18
FY19
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
Post COVID firming up in the share of the services sector in overall GVA
54.8 54.7
54.2
52.3
Per Cent
50.6
70
Expansionary Zone
65 61.2
60 56.7
Index (50=Neutral)
55
50
45
40
35 Contractionary Zone
30
Mar 24
Mar 21
Mar 22
Mar 23
Jul 21
May 21
Sep 21
May 22
Jul 22
May 23
Jul 23
Sep 22
Sep 23
Jan 24
Nov 21
Jan 22
Jan 23
Nov 23
Nov 22
24
Booming Residential Real Estate Sales Rising Tech start-ups in India
31000+
2000
%
33
X
15
150 40
150
120
Lakh Tonnes
30
Crore tonnes
Lakh tonnes
100 90
60 20
50 10
30
0 0 0
FY23
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY24
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
FY20
FY21
FY22
FY23
FY24
68 million 65 12
Transactions since 1200+ Seller Applications Logistic Service Providers
inception Cities
535,000+ 9 million 22
85% Small Sellers Sellers Transactions per month Buyer Applications
25
Infrastructure: Lifting Potential Growth
26
Social and Economic Infrastructure
Space Digital
Space Assets Telecom Electronics & IT
India has 55 active space assets, 8.02 lakh mobile towers as of >₹10,300 crore for compre-
including18 communication June 2024. hensive India Al Mission
satellites, 9 navigation satellites, 29.37 lakh Base Transceiver approved
5 scientific satellites, 3 meteo- Stations (BTSs) & 4.5 lakh 5G AIRAWAT, an AI Supercom-
rological satellites, and 20 earth BTSs. puter, secured 75th position
observation satellites in the top 500 global super-
BharatNet Project: 6,85,501
km of optical fibre cable computing list declared at the
(OFC) laid. 2.11 lakh GPs International Supercomputing
connected by OFC. Conference 2023 in Germany
DigiLocker platform has
reached over 26.28 crore
registered users.
27
Climate Change and India: Why we Must
Look at the Problem Through our Lens
Issues with the current global approaches to addressing Climate Change
Issues with the current global approaches to addressing Climate Change
Does not seek to Irrational pursuit of The current ‘Scramble’ for energy
address the core new-age resources pathways may fall guzzling AI is directly
issue, i.e. is scarring the short of addressing at odds with the
climate goals
overconsumption planet climate change
The Food-Feed Balance in the West poses a threat to food security as more cereal is produced
for animal consumption than for human consumption
India
United States
United Kingdom
Italy
Canada
Russia
France
Germany
Australia
Brazil
Spain
Ireland
0 20 40 60 80 100
Per cent of total domestic cereal supply
28
In most developed countries, less than one-third of the domestic cereal production is for
human consumption
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1961
1963
1965
1967
1969
1971
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
2019
2021
Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2023)
It takes around 100 times as much land to produce 1000 kilocalories of meat compared to
plant-based alternatives
Source: Joseph Poore and Thomas Nemecek (2018). Additional calculations by Our World in Data.
29
The Path to Sustainable Housing
The Indian
Approach to
tackling Climate
Change
30
Government of India Government of India
2023-24
ECONOMIC SURVEY
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DEPARTMENT OF
ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
Government of India
2023-24