Services Sector Drives India's Growth, Needs Skills & Innovation Push

The Economic Survey tabled by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman identifies India's services sector as the primary driver of economic growth, contributing over half the Gross Value Added. It highlights the sector's resilience, noting strong performance in IT, finance, and a post-pandemic revival in tourism and hospitality. The Survey points to high FDI inflows and the growing role of emerging areas like fintech and global capability centers. To sustain growth, it emphasizes the need for enhanced skill development, innovation, and deeper integration into global value chains.

Key Points: India's Services Sector: Economic Survey Flags Growth Engine

  • Contributes over half of India's GVA
  • Outperforms other sectors, driven by IT & digital services
  • Attracts highest share of FDI
  • Needs skill development & innovation to sustain growth
3 min read

Economic Survey flags services as backbone of growth, urges skills and innovation push

Economic Survey highlights services as India's economic backbone, driving GVA, exports & jobs. Calls for skills, innovation & digital push.

"India's services sector is well placed to move from stability towards new growth frontiers - Economic Survey"

New Delhi, January 29

India's services sector continues to be the main driver of economic growth, contributing over half of the country's Gross Value Added and playing a critical role in employment generation, exports, and investment, noted the Economic Survey laid in Parliament by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

The Survey states that the services sector has shown remarkable resilience amid global economic uncertainty and is now transitioning from traditional growth drivers to emerging high-value segments.

According to the Survey, India's services sector has consistently outperformed other sectors in recent years, supported by strong domestic demand, digital transformation, and expanding global linkages.

The Economic Survey highlights that global trade in services has grown faster than merchandise trade over the past decade, with knowledge-intensive services such as IT, business services, finance, and professional services driving expansion.

India has strengthened its position as a leading global exporter of services, particularly in IT and digitally delivered services. The Survey notes that India remains among the top global exporters of commercial services, benefitting from a skilled workforce, cost competitiveness, and technology adoption.

The growing importance of digital public infrastructure and cross-border data flows has further enhanced India's competitiveness in global services markets, it added.

The Survey observes that India's services sector recorded steady growth in the post-pandemic period, supported by recovery in contact-intensive segments such as tourism, hospitality, transport, and trade.

High-frequency indicators, including GST collections, e-way bills, air passenger traffic, and hotel occupancy rates point to sustained momentum in services activity.

The sector has also attracted the highest share of foreign direct investment (FDI), reflecting continued investor confidence in India's growth prospects.

The Economic Survey notes that while IT and IT-enabled services remain central, newer areas are increasingly contributing to growth.

Financial services have expanded with deeper digital penetration and increased formalisation. Real estate and construction-linked services have gained from urbanisation and housing demand, while logistics and transport services have benefited from infrastructure expansion and policy reforms.

Tourism and travel services have seen a sharp revival, aided by rising domestic tourism and improved connectivity.

The Survey also underlines the growing role of emerging services such as fintech, health services, education services, research and development, and global capability centres (GCCs).

Looking ahead, the Economic Survey emphasises the need to strengthen skill development, promote innovation, and enhance regulatory frameworks to sustain services-led growth.

It calls for leveraging digital technologies, improving ease of doing business, and deepening India's integration with global services value chains.

The Survey notes that with supportive policies and continued investment in human capital and technology, India's services sector is well placed to move from stability towards new growth frontiers and remain a cornerstone of the country's economic transformation.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see tourism and hospitality getting a mention. The revival in domestic travel has been incredible. As a small hotel owner in Udaipur, I've seen bookings bounce back strongly. Hope the government continues to improve connectivity and infrastructure to support this sector. 🙏
A
Arjun K
While the report is positive, I feel it glosses over the challenges. The IT sector is facing global headwinds and layoffs. We need a more balanced growth strategy that also strengthens manufacturing. 'Make in India' is just as important. Over-reliance on services can be risky.
S
Sarah B
The emphasis on digital public infrastructure like UPI and Aadhaar is a game-changer. It's not just about IT exports; it's about building a digital ecosystem that makes every service sector more efficient. India's tech stack is becoming a model for the world.
K
Karthik V
Logistics and transport services benefiting from infrastructure expansion is so true. The new highways and dedicated freight corridors are reducing costs and time. This is a silent revolution that boosts every other sector from e-commerce to manufacturing. Good to see it recognized.
M
Meera T
The call for strengthening skill development is critical. As a teacher, I see a huge gap between what colleges teach and what the services industry needs. We need more industry-academia partnerships and vocational training focused on new-age skills. The future is in knowledge-intensive services.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50