In 1990, India was the richer of the two. Thirty-five years later, China's economy is 4.8 times larger. The gap was not destiny — it was a sequence of deliberate structural choices. Here is what they were, and what India must do to close them.
It is the most consequential economic divergence of the modern era. Two civilizations, two agrarian economies, two billion people combined — and a GDP gap that, in 2025, puts China at roughly $19.4 trillion and India at $4.1 trillion. The per-capita version is even more jarring: $13,800 vs. $2,950. In 1990, India was actually the richer country per person.
The standard story tells you that China "grew faster because it was authoritarian" or "because it had a head start." Both are lazy. The real story is structural, measurable, and — for India — uncomfortably specific. Seven variables, compounded over thirty-five years, did almost all the work.
Seven reasons China won the first 35 years
1. Manufacturing vs. the services leapfrog
China did the hard thing: it built mass manufacturing from scratch. Special Economic Zones were created in 1980 — a full decade before India's 1991 liberalization — and by 2007, the SEZs alone accounted for 22% of GDP, 46% of FDI, and 46% of exports [[cite:https://www.fdiintelligence.com/content/feature/chinas-special-economic-zones-a-model-for-development-82876]]. Manufacturing peaked at 28–30% of GDP — the classic Lewis Model industrialization, pulling hundreds of millions of workers from farms to factories.
India skipped this stage entirely. It jumped to services — IT, BPO, finance. Services now contribute ~50% of GDP, the same as China, but with manufacturing stuck at 13–17% [[cite:https://www.ideasforindia.in/topics/productivity-innovation/did-india-skip-manufacturing-and-go-straight-to-services.html]]. The problem: services don't absorb low-skill labor the way factories do. India created world-class IT companies but not mass employment.
2. The investment gap — 10 to 15 points of GDP, every year, for 35 years
This is the single most powerful explanatory variable in the entire story. China invested 40–46% of GDP in fixed capital — roads, rail, ports, factories, housing — for three decades straight. India invested 25–33%. That 10–15 percentage point gap, compounded annually, is the difference between a 45,000-kilometre high-speed rail network and a country where freight still averages 25 km/h. The infrastructure gap is the GDP gap, viewed through a different lens.
A 10-percentage-point annual investment gap, sustained for 35 years, is roughly equivalent to giving China an extra United States' worth of capital stock over the period.
3. Human capital: 20 points of literacy, 30 points of female participation
China achieved near-universal literacy (96.7%) by 2020; India sits at roughly 77% [[cite:https://ycharts.com/indicators/china_adult_literacy_rate]]. More critically, China's female labor force participation rate — 55–63% — has been 2.5 to 3 times India's (22–34%) for the entire period [[cite:https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.TLF.CACT.FE.ZS]]. That is not a marginal difference. If India had matched China's FLFPR, it would have had an additional 150–200 million workers in the formal economy.
4. Land: state ownership vs. democratic acquisition
China's state-owned land system lets local governments requisition and assemble industrial parcels in months. India's 2013 Land Acquisition Act requires 70–80% consent from affected families, Social Impact Assessments, and multi-layered judicial review — a process that routinely takes years and spawns litigation [[cite:https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00219096221133580]]. For a manufacturer choosing where to build a factory, the difference is existential.
5. FDI: a 12-year head start
China opened to foreign direct investment in 1979 — twelve years before India's forced liberalization in 1991. Peak Chinese FDI inflows reached $344 billion in 2021; India's best year was $81 billion in FY2024–25 [[cite:https://www.macrotrends.net/global-metrics/countries/IND/india/foreign-direct-investment]]. Early FDI built manufacturing ecosystems that attracted more FDI — the agglomeration effect. By the time India opened, China had already locked in global supply chains.
6. Savings: 43% vs. 28%
China's gross domestic savings rate — about 43% of GDP — generates domestic capital for investment without relying on foreign financing. India's ~28% means less capital formation, more external dependence, and a structural ceiling on infrastructure spending [[cite:https://tradingeconomics.com/china/gross-savings-percent-of-gdp-wb-data.html]].
7. Governance: speed of execution
China's centralized system executes infrastructure and industrial policy at a speed India's federal democracy structurally cannot match: Five-Year Plans with binding targets, performance-based promotion of local officials, and no judicial veto on land use. The trade-off is real — accountability, rights, resilience — but the execution gap is enormous.
Projections: the next 10 years (2026–2035)
The growth-rate tipping point has already arrived. India's nominal GDP growth rate already exceeds China's, and this gap will widen through 2035. China's nominal growth is decelerating structurally: an aging population (median age 40 vs. India's 28), a property sector that has peaked, declining total-factor productivity, and a trade war that is constraining its export-led model. India, by contrast, is in its demographic dividend window, with rising urbanization and reforms — PLI, GST, digital infrastructure — that are just beginning to compound.
| Scenario | China 2035 | India 2035 | India / China |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear (China 2.5%, India 5.5%) | $24.8T | $7.0T | 28% |
| Base (China 3.5%, India 7.5%) | $27.4T | $8.5T | 31% |
| Bull (China 4.5%, India 9.5%) | $30.1T | $10.2T | 34% |
In the base case, India's GDP roughly doubles (2.1×) while China's grows by only 1.4×. But the absolute gap barely narrows — from $15.3T to $18.9T — because China starts from a 4.8× larger base. Growth rates converge; levels do not. India catches China's absolute GDP only around ~2066 in the base case, or ~2059 in the bull case, on straight-line extrapolation.
What must change for India to outpace China
India will grow faster than China — that is virtually locked in by demographics. The question is whether it can grow fast enough to close the absolute gap in a meaningful timeframe. Six structural metrics matter most, and here is where they currently stand versus where they need to go.
1. Manufacturing share: 13% → 25% of GDP
India's manufacturing share has actually been declining from 16% in 2015 to roughly 13% today [[cite:https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/indufacturing/manufacturing-needs-to-grow-to-25-of-gdp-by-2047-to-become-developed-nation/articleshow/121443715.cms]]. A BCG-Z47 joint report sets the 2047 target at 25% — China's level. That requires PLI schemes to move from announcement to actual production at scale, the four labor codes to be implemented across states, and freight corridor completion to bring logistics costs from 14% of GDP down to under 10%.
2. Investment rate: 30% → 40%+ of GDP
GFCF is at roughly 30% of GDP; central government capex is at 3.2% of GDP (it has nearly tripled from 1.1% in FY15, so momentum exists). China's benchmark is 40.6%. Sustained government capex at 3.5–4% of GDP and a recovery in private corporate investment are both required. The National Infrastructure Pipeline's ₹111 lakh crore target by 2030 must actually materialize [[cite:https://tenderkart.in/blog/national-infrastructure-pipeline]].
3. Female labor force participation: 34% → 55%
India is at roughly 34% — up from ~22% in 2017–18, so there is genuine momentum [[cite:https://ceda.ashoka.edu.in/insight/women-in-indias-labour-force-what-the-latest-data-show]]. Goldman Sachs estimates that each additional percentage point of female LFPR adds roughly one percentage point to potential growth [[cite:https://www.goldmansachs.com/insights/articles/indias-growing-labour-force]]. The government's target of +33% by 2030 requires investing roughly 2% of GDP in the care economy — an ILO estimate puts the job creation at 11 million, 70% of which would go to women.
4. R&D spending: 0.64% → 2% of GDP
India's R&D intensity is "significantly behind global peers" [[cite:https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/india/indias-rd-spending-at-0-64-of-gdp-significantly-behind-global-peers/articleshow/121616840.cms]]. Two-thirds of the spend is government-funded; in China, two-thirds is private. India's global patent share sits at roughly 4%. The ANRF has set a ₹36,000 crore private co-investment target, but the deeper issue is structural: the IIT/IISc system needs to pivot from producing graduates to producing commercially viable research.
5. Infrastructure capex: 3.2% → 6%+ of GDP
Central government capex has tripled in a decade, from 1.1% of GDP in FY15 to 3.2% today. China's peak was over 8.5%. The Gati Shakti digital platform is helping coordinate project planning, but execution on freight corridors, port capacity, and urban transit needs to accelerate dramatically.
6. Savings rate: 28% → 38%
India's gross domestic savings are stuck at ~28% of GDP — gold and real estate absorb a disproportionate share. Deepening formal savings instruments, expanding insurance and pension penetration (currently ~12% of the workforce), and continuing the Jan Dhan-led financial inclusion push are the three levers that matter.
The honest assessment
India will outpace China's growth rate for the foreseeable future. Demographics alone guarantee this: India adds 8–10 million workers per year while China's working-age population is shrinking. The question is not whether India grows faster; it is whether the gap closes in absolute terms within any reasonable investment horizon. In the base case, it does not — not until the 2060s.
But the headline number is not the only number that matters. Three second-order points tend to get lost:
- PPP adjustment narrows the gap meaningfully. India's GDP in PPP terms is already ~$14.6T vs. China's ~$35.3T (IMF 2025). The nominal gap is wide because Indian domestic prices are lower; the real-economy gap is narrower.
- Per-capita convergence is the real story. If India sustains 6–7% real growth, per-capita GDP could reach $5,000–$6,000 by 2035 — the threshold where domestic consumption becomes a self-sustaining growth engine.
- Quality of growth matters as much as quantity. If India builds a manufacturing base that employs its demographic dividend rather than creating services-led "jobless growth," the structural foundation changes fundamentally.
| Reform | Current | Target | Likelihood by 2035 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing share | 13% | 25% | Low–Medium |
| Female LFP | 34% | 55% | Medium |
| Investment rate | 30% | 40% | Low–Medium |
| R&D / GDP | 0.64% | 2% | Low |
| Infrastructure / GDP | 3.2% | 6% | Medium |
| Savings rate | 28% | 38% | Low |
The honest bottom line: India does not need to beat China on every metric. It needs to hit the demographic-dividend sweet spot of 8%+ real growth sustained over 15–20 years, which requires at least three or four of the reforms above to move meaningfully. That is historically rare — but not unprecedented. South Korea, Taiwan, and China itself all did it. The window is open now through roughly 2045, after which India's own demographics start aging. It is a use-it-or-lose-it decade.
The story of the next decade is not whether India catches China. It is whether India uses the demographic window it has — the one China has already spent.