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India is ready to make a transformational leap in its economy, with McKinsey & Company placing its estimate in a fresh report that 18 high-growth sectors will achieve up to $2 trillion in revenues by 2030—nearly three times the $690 billion in 2023. The sectors, ranging from electric vehicles and semiconductors to artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and urbanization, are expected to contribute to about 30% of India's incremental GDP by 2040, in alignment with the nation's vision to become a developed economy by 2047.
The study, India's Future Arenas: Engines of Growth and Dynamism, categorizes these 18 industries under four "global arenas," where Indian companies can reach global size, and five "national arenas," with domestic focus. Urban construction will be the largest, with revenues of $400–490 billion by 2030, driven by urbanization and the demand for infrastructure. Travel and tourism, e-commerce, renewables with storage, and cloud services are among the other national arenas. Globally, India is asserting itself in semiconductors, auto parts, cybersecurity, AI software, and space technology.
The prime drivers for these opportunities include faster technological innovations, consistent investments, and expansion in large addressable markets. For example, the data center capacity in India is growing at 26% annually, and the travel and tourism industry will increase over double by 2030, fueled by domestic and niche inbound trips including medical and spiritual tourism.
McKinsey demands tailored strategies per industry, challenging policymakers and firms to align policy systems, human capital, and capital to sector maturity and competitive dynamics. If India acts decisively, these leaps can propel the nation to global economic leadership in a few decades.
Source: McKinsey & Company, Business Standard, Fortune India, ET Infra, CNBC-TV18, Angel One.
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