Try GOLD - Free
Capital deepening has weakened and our productivity has stalled
Mint Mumbai
|December 04, 2025
Mobilizing labour and capital isn't enough. India must make more efficient use of both for sustainably higher GDP growth
(BLOOMBERG)
India is at the threshold of one of the most promising economic decades in its modern history, yet the hard arithmetic underlying growth reflects a more fragile situation than our headline GDP figures suggest. Economists apply the Sala-i-Martin framework to break growth down into its core components and ask a simple-yet-powerful question: How much of the rise in output per worker can be attributed to the use of more capital (a single factor of production), and how much can be attributed to India becoming more productive on the whole? The results from India's growth decomposition between 1990 and 2023 reflect the emergence of a two-pronged challenge: capital deepening is now uneven and no longer accelerating, while total factor productivity (TFP) has remained stubbornly stagnant.
Trendlines demonstrate that India's capital deepening has followed an inverted-U path: it increased steadily through the 1990s and early 2000s, peaked around the mid-2000s, and then gradually declined-consistent with a slowdown in India's investment cycle after 2011. By contrast, TFP exhibits a shallow rise in the early reform years, a long plateau and then a noticeable downward bend after the mid-2010s; this indicates that productivity gains have not been continuous. Both curves reveal that neither capital deepening nor TFP is on an upward long-term trajectory, which reinforces the concern that India's growth engines are weakening rather than strengthening.
This story is from the December 04, 2025 edition of Mint Mumbai.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Blurring boundaries
Now in its 10th year, the Serendipity Festival has broadened the arts landscape by getting top talent to collaborate across genres and making art easier to understand
12 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Del Toro: At home with monsters
From his earliest films to 'Frankenstein', Guillermo del Toro's work has featured memorable screen monsters
4 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
When cities lend themselves to art
With the cohort of writers, thinkers and artists being more or less the same at the many art and literature events across India, location becomes all the more important and the real differentiator.
1 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Apple departures point to challenges for iPhone’s dominance
Apple is facing a wave of executive departures as the company continues a period of transition, not only among its leadership but, if rivals have their way, for its business as well.
2 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Pilot fatigue rules deferred for IndiGo amid mega meltdown
India’s aviation network has plunged into disruption, with nearly half of all domestic flights cancelled over the past three days— largely at IndiGo—stranding hundreds of thousands of passengers and forcing the regulator to soften its newly-tightened pilot fatigue norms.
2 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Netflix to buy Warner Bros. in $72 billion cash, stock deal
Netflix Inc. agreed to buy Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. in a historic combination, joining the world’s dominant paid streaming service with one of Hollywood's oldest and most revered studios.
2 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Repo gets a Goldilocks cut
Central bank cites India’s robust economic growth and benign inflation to go for a 25 basis points repo cut
3 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Falling rupee puts foreign study costs under scanner
The rupee's depreciation against the US dollar to a historic low is forcing students headed abroad for higher education to rethink how they fund their degrees.
2 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
The many fruits of Meghalaya's creative economy
Post-covid, Meghalaya decided to revive its economy by focusing on the creative arts. The result is a delightful medley of food, literature and music experiments
5 mins
December 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
'RBI has no Re target, we let market decide'
Reserve Bank of India governor Sanjay Malhotra reaffirmed that the central bank does not target any exchange rate level and that it relies on market forces to determine the currency’s value.
1 min
December 06, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
