According to the latest Ecowrap report released by SBI Research, India is firmly on track to transition into the upper middle-income category by the year 2030, with per capita income projected to touch nearly four thousand dollars. Beyond this milestone, the report presents a cautiously optimistic assessment of India’s longer-term aspiration of becoming a high-income country by 2047, coinciding with one hundred years of Independence.
The report highlights how India’s growth trajectory has undergone a fundamental transformation over the past decade. For nearly six decades after Independence, economic expansion was slow and uneven, with India taking around sixty years to achieve a gross domestic product of one trillion dollars.
That pace, however, has sharply changed in recent years. The economy doubled to two trillion dollars by 2014, crossed the three trillion dollar mark in 2021 and reached four trillion dollars in 2025. SBI Research now projects that India is likely to add the next trillion in just about two years, pushing the economy to the five trillion dollar milestone and positioning it as the world’s third-largest economy by 2028.
This rapid compression of time between successive GDP milestones, the report suggests, reflects deeper structural shifts rather than temporary cyclical factors. India’s performance over the decade ending 2024 places it in the ninety-fifth percentile of global average real GDP growth, underscoring a decisive improvement in its relative economic standing. The findings indicate that India has emerged as one of the fastest growing large economies in the world, driven by strong domestic demand, sustained public investment, expanding manufacturing capacity and the continued dominance of services exports.
While headline GDP numbers underline scale and momentum, SBI Research places equal emphasis on per capita income as the true measure of economic progress. In this respect, the report traces India’s long and uneven journey toward income expansion. India reached a per capita income of one thousand dollars only in 2009, nearly sixty-two years after Independence. The next milestone came much faster, with per capita income doubling to two thousand dollars by 2019. According to the projections outlined in the Ecowrap, India is expected to reach three thousand dollars per capita by 2026 and move close to four thousand dollars by 2030.
Reaching this level would enable India to cross the World Bank’s threshold for upper middle-income status, which currently stands at a per capita gross national income of around four thousand five hundred dollars.
SBI Research states that India can and will make this transition within the next few years, placing it alongside countries such as China and Indonesia under the present global classification.
The report notes that this shift would mark a significant departure from India’s historical positioning as a lower middle-income economy and would signal greater economic resilience and maturity.
The broader global context strengthens the significance of India’s projected transition. Between 1990 and 2024, the number of high-income countries worldwide increased from thirty-nine to eighty-seven, while the number of low-income economies declined sharply.
This trend, the report argues, demonstrates that upward mobility is achievable for countries that sustain growth and reforms, though it also warns that many nations have stagnated after reaching middle-income levels. India’s ability to avoid this so-called middle-income trap will depend on whether it can maintain productivity gains, invest in human capital and ensure inclusive growth.
Looking ahead to 2047, the SBI Ecowrap examines what it would take for India to attain high-income country status. Using the current benchmark of thirteen thousand nine hundred thirty-six dollars in per capita gross national income, the report estimates that India would need to sustain a compound annual growth rate of around seven point five per cent in per capita GNI over the next twenty-three years.
Importantly, the report points out that this is not an unrealistic target, given that India’s per capita GNI has grown at an average rate of eight point three per cent over the past twenty-three years.
However, the report also introduces an important note of caution. The income threshold for high-income classification is not fixed and is likely to rise over time. If the benchmark increases to eighteen thousand dollars by 2047, India would face a significantly steeper challenge.
Under this scenario, assuming an average population growth of zero point six per cent and a stable deflator environment, India would need to sustain nominal GDP growth of approximately eleven point five per cent in dollar terms for more than two decades.
Achieving such growth, SBI Research cautions, will require unwavering reform momentum and policy consistency. The report stresses the importance of strengthening education and healthcare systems, boosting labour productivity, expanding manufacturing competitiveness and maintaining macroeconomic stability. Without these structural enablers, rapid early gains could slow, making the high-income ambition more difficult to realise.
Taken together, the Ecowrap portrays India as an economy at a critical inflection point. The transition to upper middle-income status by 2030 now appears more a matter of execution than aspiration.
Whether India can convert this momentum into high-income prosperity by 2047 will depend on the choices it makes in the coming years. As the report implicitly suggests, the next two decades will determine whether India’s economic rise becomes a lasting transformation or a story of unfulfilled potential.


















