India Set to Become the 'Office of the World' as New Growth Engine

According to a new EY report, India is poised to become a leading global growth engine, potentially serving as the "office of the world" for multinational corporations. This transformation is fueled by its evolution from cost-arbitrage to providing high-value digital engineering, consulting, and innovation services. Critical enablers include a robust digital public infrastructure that reduces business costs and a thriving, well-funded entrepreneurship ecosystem. Furthermore, a young demographic profile and a projected six-fold rise in per capita income by 2047 are expected to unlock an unprecedented consumer boom and manufacturing potential.

Key Points: India: The 'Office of the World' & Next Global Growth Engine

  • IT & Services Hub
  • Digital Public Infrastructure
  • Entrepreneurship Boom
  • Demographic Dividend
3 min read

India poised to emerge as 'Office of the World', EY Report highlights strong long-term outlook

An EY report forecasts India as a top global growth engine, driven by IT leadership, digital infrastructure, entrepreneurship, and a demographic boom.

"India is well-positioned to emerge as one of the world's most powerful growth engines over the next two decades. - EY Report"

New Delhi, January 1

India is well-positioned to emerge as one of the world's most powerful growth engines over the next two decades, driven by its leadership in information technology services, rapid digitalization, strong entrepreneurship, and favourable demographics, according to a recent EY report on India's long-term economic prospects.

The report highlights India's status as the world's information technology and services hub, noting that the country has a unique opportunity to become the "office of the world" for global corporations. What began as a cost-arbitrage model has evolved into a high-value proposition, with India increasingly providing advanced digital engineering, consulting, product development and innovation-led services to multinational companies.

A key force multiplier for this growth trajectory is India's digital public infrastructure. Widespread adoption of digital platforms has significantly reduced the cost of doing business, improved efficiency and transparency, and accelerated the formalization of the economy.

The report noted that this infrastructure has also deepened financial inclusion and unlocked new business opportunities across sectors, giving India a distinct competitive advantage among large economies.

Addressing the country's credit gap is identified as another critical lever to sustain high growth. The report highlighted that accelerated credit growth, along with the development of a deeper corporate bond market, can boost consumption by expanding access to personal credit while simultaneously providing long-term capital for investments in manufacturing and infrastructure.

This, in turn, would help fuel demand and expand productive capacity across the economy.

India's thriving entrepreneurship ecosystem, supported by strong flows of private capital, is also expected to play a central role. Rapid digitalization and increased availability of venture and private equity funding have led to a spurt in new-age companies across technology and other sectors.

The report stated that this wave of entrepreneurship will be instrumental in delivering differential growth and driving innovation-led expansion in the coming years.

Demographics remain one of India's strongest structural advantages. The report projects a six-fold increase in per capita income by 2047 for a population of more than 1.7 billion people, a transformation that is expected to unleash an unprecedented consumer boom.

A young, expanding workforce combined with rising incomes is likely to make India one of the fastest-growing consumer markets globally.

On the supply side, making domestic manufacturing globally competitive is seen as a strategic priority. Success in complex, high-value and emerging sectors would position India as a manufacturing hub serving both domestic and international markets, strengthening its role in global value chains.

Infrastructure development is another cornerstone of the long-term outlook. The report sets a target of reducing logistics costs from the current 14-18 per cent of GDP to the global best practice level of around 8 per cent by 2030, which would significantly enhance competitiveness and productivity.

However, the report cautioned that while these growth drivers and enablers underpin India's rapid economic rise, certain areas require continued policy attention to most effectively accelerate the growth curve and sustain momentum over the long term.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
So proud to read this! 🇮🇳 The digital infrastructure like UPI has been a game-changer. It's not just about IT services anymore; we're leading in innovation and product development. The next 20 years look incredibly bright if we can skill our youth properly.
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Rohit P
Great report, but a word of caution. The "credit gap" point is vital. My small business still struggles to get a loan without collateral. For true inclusive growth, banks and NBFCs need to reach Tier 2/3 cities and rural entrepreneurs more effectively.
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Sarah B
Working for a global firm with a major India centre, I can confirm the shift from cost-saving to value-creation is real. The quality of strategic thinking and digital solutions coming from our Indian teams is outstanding. The world is taking notice.
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Vikram M
Demographics is our biggest strength, but also a challenge. We need to create millions of quality jobs every year. Manufacturing and infrastructure push is key. 'Make in India' needs to succeed for balanced growth beyond services. Jai Hind!
K
Kavya N
The entrepreneurship wave is so exciting! As a founder in Bangalore, the ecosystem support has improved dramatically. But the report is right, long-term policy stability is needed to sustain this momentum. Let's build not just for India, but for the world.

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