Ten years ago, Kamlesh Kumar was proud to join a Noida-based tile manufacturing company at Rs 25,000 monthly salary. Like any first-time earner, the young commerce graduate from Patna in Bihar had dreams: buy a car and purchase a small apartment even if it meant a stretch. Loans and a little family support would get him there, he was sure.
Those were heady times for the economy – India’s GDP had expanded a robust 8.5 per cent in 2010 – and Kumar and most Indians were optimistic.
Cut to 2021: it’s been a decade since his first job and Kumar’s wheels are a Honda Activa scooter and he lives in a 2BHK rented apartment in Noida with a wife and 2 children. This is despite the hikes he got from four job changes. He’s stoic but at times gives in to lament: “I am practical now. Not everybody can own a car and a home in this city.”
33-year-old Kumar’s inability to afford at least a car, even if not a home, lies at the nub of a searing question before India’s policy makers, thought leaders, and civil society: has the world’s sixth-largest economy, that has been chasing the elusive double-digit growth for two decades, failed its tens of millions aspiring to a middle-class life?
The unmet dreams of Kumar and millions of his peers are showing up aggregated in crimped demand in the economy. Earlier this month, Ford Motors announced its exit from India, citing losses of over $2 billion in 10 years. Earlier, Harley Davidson and General Motors, too, had packed their bags cutting their losses. Some of this could be traced to the inability of the US majors to dovetail their business models to acutely price-sensitive Indian markets. Still, it is telling that in the second decade of what is said to be the Asian (nee Indian) century, auto sales contracted 1.5 per cent on a compounded basis not in the one- or two-years’ time frame but over a longer period (2010-11 to 2020-21) — when it should have easily included the likes of Kumar with better income growth.
Beyond anecdotes, there is a crimping of income at the national level. And, to be sure, the trend is not of recent years: the slowdown is a decade old. As per data from the World Bank, between 2011 and 2020, India’s per capita GDP (PPP) at current prices in US dollar terms compounded 3.69 per cent annually — less than half the growth in the preceding decade of 7.69 per cent.
Add to that Covid has made for a reset of gains made in the last three-four decades. A Pew Research report in March this year showed that a third of the Indian middle class had lost incomes when the first Covid wave hit India in mid-2020. “Middle class in India is estimated to have shrunk by 32 million in 2020 as a consequence of the downturn, compared with the number it may have reached absent the pandemic. This accounts for 60 per cent of the global retreat in the number of people in the middle-income tier,” the report said. India led with the most number of people (75 million) falling into poverty in the economic devastation after Covid wave #1. The situation has to be only a lot worse in the second wave in the summer of 2021 but no estimate is available, yet.