Thursday, June 11, 2026

Hope Fading, Prices Rising

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) recently released the results of its latest forward-looking surveys (May 2026 Round). Based on the feedback received from respondents, the survey results provide important insights with respect to consumer confidence — both urban and rural — inflationary expectations and economic growth expectations from professional forecasters.

Urban Consumer Confidence – A third successive decline

Consumer confidence for the current period declined for the third successive round, with the Current Situation Index (CSI) falling sharply to 90.7 from 95.7 in the previous round. A value below 100 indicates a state of pessimism, and on this measure, urban households are now firmly in negative territory on their assessment of present conditions.

The deterioration is broad-based. Perceptions on the general economic situation worsened considerably — the net response on economic conditions fell by 7.9 points to -16.5, as nearly 48% of respondents felt conditions had worsened compared to a year ago. Sentiment on employment also deteriorated sharply, with the net response on employment falling to -14.4 from -9.1 in the March 2026 round. Income perceptions barely stayed positive, with a net response of just 0.9.


The forward-looking Future Expectations Index (FEI) also weakened, dropping 1.5 points to 118.7 — the lowest reading since September 2023. While the index remains in optimistic territory (above 100), the trajectory is concerning. Households have revised down their expectations on economic situation, employment, income and spending across both time horizons. The waning of confidence is primarily driven by ebbed sentiment on discretionary expenditure, with non-essential spending expectations falling sharply: the net response on future non-essential spending collapsed to 15.9 from 21.1 in the previous round.

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Rural Consumer Confidence – Similarly Strained

Rural confidence tells a similar story. The Current Situation Index (CSI) for rural households fell further to 95.2, declining for the second successive round from a recent peak of 100.9 in September 2025 — a fall of nearly 6 points over three survey rounds. Current perceptions on the economic situation moved into negative territory (net response of -2.5), and employment sentiment also turned negative (-1.2). Income perceptions remain weak at -5.8.


The Future Expectations Index (FEI) for rural households fell sharply to 119.3 from 125.1 in March 2026, with worsening conditions across all parameters except prices. Forward expectations on income fell to a net response of 38.9, down from 45.7. Spending expectations also softened notably, with non-essential spending expectations falling to a net response of just 42.6, from 59.5 in the previous round — a significant pullback suggesting rural households are tightening their belt.​


 

Household Inflation Expectations – Rising Sharply

Urban households’ current median inflation perception jumped by 60 basis points (bps) to 7.8% compared to the previous round. Inflation expectations for the next three months and one year both edged up by 80 bps and 50 bps respectively, reaching 9.3% for both horizons. The proportion of respondents anticipating higher prices inched up across all product categories, with food products, non-food products and housing all seeing increased price pressure expectations.

The rural picture is consistent. Median inflation perception among rural households rose by 30 bps to 5.9%, and one-year-ahead inflation expectations climbed 40 bps to 7.2%. Across age and occupation groups, the upward drift in inflation expectations is widespread — particularly notable among retired persons, who now expect inflation of 8.6% over the next year.

Professional Forecasters – GDP revised down, inflation revised up

GDP: Real GDP is now expected to grow at 6.5% in FY27, revised down by 40 bps from the previous round. For FY28, the forecast stands at 6.9%, modestly lower by 10 bps. Forecasters have assigned the highest probability to GDP growth in the 6.5-6.9% range for FY27, while for FY28, the modal outcome is also the same band. Annual growth in real PFCE and GFCF for FY27 are expected at 6.8% and 6.5% respectively, with GFCF revised down by 60 bps — a signal of tempered capital formation expectations.

Real GVA growth for FY27 is pegged at 6.6%, with services (7.7%) and industry (6.8%) doing the heavy lifting, while agriculture is expected to contribute a modest 2.4%.

Inflation: This is where the story turns uncomfortable. Annual headline CPI inflation is expected at 4.9% for FY27 and 4.5% for FY28. The quarterly path, however, reveals a more concerning picture: CPI is forecast at 4.0% in Q1 FY27, rising to 4.9% in Q2, accelerating to 5.5% in Q3, and easing only marginally to 5.2% in Q4. Core CPI (excluding food and fuel) is expected to rise from 3.9% in Q1 to between 4.4-4.7% through the rest of the year.

WPI inflation forecasts have been revised up sharply. WPI All Commodities is projected at 8.9% in Q1 FY27, 9.0% in Q2, before moderating to 7.9% in Q3 and 6.5% in Q4.

External Sector: Merchandise exports are expected to grow 5.0% in FY27 and 4.7% in FY28 in US dollar terms. Imports, however, are forecast to grow much faster at 10.5% in FY27, before normalizing to 4.6% in FY28. This asymmetry pushes the current account deficit (CAD) to 2.1% of GDP in FY27 — a significant deterioration of 60 bps from the previous round’s estimate — narrowing to 1.2% in FY28. The median USD/INR rate is pegged at around 95.4-96.6 across the quarters of FY27, with crude oil (Indian basket) expected in the $85-105/barrel range across quarters.

The takeaway

Taken together, the May 2026 round of RBI’s surveys paints a picture of an economy that is growing at a reasonable but moderating pace, against a backdrop of rising inflation pressures and rapidly eroding consumer confidence — across both urban and rural India.

The triple squeeze is hard to miss: households feel worse off today than a year ago, they expect prices to be significantly higher a year from now, and they are pulling back on discretionary spending. Professional forecasters have simultaneously marked down growth and marked up inflation. The widening CAD and sharp upward revision in WPI forecasts add to the headwinds.

Hope was the dominant sentiment in previous survey rounds. In this one, it is fading. The optimism that characterized forward expectations — buoyant FEI readings, resilient income outlook, strong discretionary spending intentions — is giving way to something more sober. If the quarterly CPI trajectory plays out as forecast, with inflation touching 5.5% in Q3 FY27, the RBI will face an uncomfortable policy tradeoff, even as growth edges lower.

For investors, the signposts are clear enough: demand recovery may disappoint consensus, margin pressures from higher input costs are likely to persist, and the consumer staples vs discretionary divide may widen further. The surveys may not move markets directly, but they sharpen the lens through which to read the earnings season ahead.

 


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

India’s fading premium

The 3Ds: A Framework That Needs Revisiting

In a post in May 2017 (see here), I had argued that Democracy, Demography, and Demand — the 3Ds that global investors had long cited as India's structural pillars — were in fact the key challenges for sustainable economic growth, not straightforward advantages. I had warned then that "pseudo-socialist and quasi-feudal" political incentives often led to capital misallocation, that young demography uncoupled from skill formation was a liability not an asset, and that aspirational consumption driven by political promises rather than income growth was neither desirable nor sustainable.

Nine years later, that assessment has aged uncomfortably well.

The 3Ds remain the rhetorical foundation of every India pitch deck. But in practice, each of the three pillars has shown meaningful stress:

Democracy: Stability without predictability

The political stability that investors valued has been real. But stability of government and predictability of policy are different things, and the distinction matters enormously for long-term capital allocation.

Policy unpredictability — retroactive regulatory changes, sudden sectoral interventions, judicial reversals of contracts — has become a recurring theme in India's investment narrative. Enforcement agencies, whose independence from political direction is a minimum requirement for credible rule of law, have been perceived by many foreign investors as instruments of selective pressure rather than neutral arbitration. Whether or not this perception is entirely fair, it exists, and perceptions drive capital flows.

The consequences are visible in the data. India's share of global market capitalization has fallen to 3% in May 2026 — a 50-month low, down from a peak of 4.6%. Foreign portfolio investors have recorded outflows for three consecutive months, with CY26 YTD outflows from Indian equities totaling $25.9 billion. Large-scale FDI — the kind that reflects genuine confidence in contract enforcement and regulatory stability — has not arrived in the volumes the India growth story would logically support.

The weak contract enforcement mechanism and the perceived misuse of enforcement agencies may not be the headline reasons cited in FII exit reports. But they are the background conditions that make it easier for a global portfolio manager to reallocate to Korea or Taiwan when those markets begin to offer more compelling near-term returns. The institutional trust that transforms a structural growth story into sustained capital inflows requires more than a good narrative. It requires consistent, rule-bound behavior over many years. That work remains incomplete.

Demography: Dividend deferred

India has the world's largest young population. This is an extraordinary potential asset. It is also an extraordinary potential liability if not channelized properly — a point I made in 2017 & 2019 (see here) and which has not become less true in the interim.

The demographic dividend requires a specific set of preconditions: quality education at scale, practical skill formation aligned with the labour market, employment generation that absorbs new entrants faster than the workforce grows, and social infrastructure — healthcare, housing, transport — that keeps a young population productive rather than frustrated.

India's record on these preconditions has been mixed. The headline growth in formal employment has not kept pace with the scale of the young population entering the labour market each year. Real wages for a large segment of the working population have not kept pace with food and services inflation, eroding purchasing power and suppressing the consumption-led growth that was supposed to be the demand side of the demographic story.

The rise of aspirational consumption driven by credit and political transfers — rather than genuine income growth — has created demand that is more fragile than it appears. When that fragility is tested by food inflation, fuel price hikes, or job uncertainty, the consumption numbers disappoint. Which is precisely what has been happening.

Demand: The engine that stuttered

The third D — Demand — is where the recent underperformance is most directly visible in corporate earnings.

The Nifty 50 registered only 5% EPS growth in FY26, following a 16%-plus CAGR in the five years from FY20 to FY25. The 4QFY26 result season marked the eighth consecutive quarter of single-digit earnings growth for the Nifty since the pandemic era.

The Consumer sector P/E, at 38.5x, sits at a 10% discount to its 10-year average. FMCG companies are taking calibrated price hikes, reducing grammages, and cutting marketing spend — the classic playbook of businesses navigating margin pressure from both sides. Companies need crude to remain below $90/bbl to protect margins; it is currently running at $106/bbl.

IT — historically the sector that combined India's demographic and educational advantages with global demand — has delivered a structural rather than cyclical disappointment. Technology trades at 16x, a 26% discount to its 10-year average. Infosys guided for 1.5-3.5% constant currency revenue growth for FY27. HCL Tech guided 1-4%. AI-led pricing pressure, early signs of revenue deflation in legacy services, and the recognition that previously assumed-stable revenue pools may be "deflatable" have reframed the sector's growth narrative. The dividend yield for technology has risen to 4.7% — the market's way of saying it expects income, not growth, from these businesses going forward.

Private sector capex — the investment cycle that was supposed to follow the post-COVID infrastructure push — has not materialized with the breadth and depth anticipated. Corporate balance sheets are healthier, but the willingness to commit to large expansionary investments in an environment of demand uncertainty and elevated input costs is limited.

The fourth D that was missing: Depth

There is a fourth argument that has historically been made for India's valuation premium — the argument of market depth and breadth. India has one of the largest equity market ecosystems among emerging markets, with hundreds of listed companies, a developed institutional framework, robust retail participation through the SIP culture, and a regulatory infrastructure that compares well against peers.

This argument has real merit. The domestic institutional base — DII inflows of $41.4 billion in CY26 YTD — has been the primary shock absorber in a year of intense FII selling. Without this structural domestic bid, the market's correction would have been considerably deeper. The SIP culture is genuinely transformative and represents a democratization of equity ownership that has few parallels in emerging market history.

But the depth argument has a counterweight that is harder to dismiss: only a handful of Indian companies have achieved genuine global scale and performed consistently across cycles. The ambition to be a technology and innovation powerhouse has not translated into companies that compete at the frontier globally. India seems to have lost ground in the race for new technologies — semiconductors, AI infrastructure, advanced manufacturing — that are reshaping where global capital flows. The result is material liquidation of foreign portfolio and private equity investments, as global allocators redirect capital toward markets where those technology bets are being won.

India's equity market is deep in breadth but not yet in the kind of globally competitive corporate quality that sustains a premium over decades. Until that changes, the premium will remain contested.

The honest assessment

The two-year time correction in Indian equities is not a market failure. It is the market performing its basic function — pricing out a premium that was built on expectations that were not met.

The 3Ds that justified India's premium were not fictional. Demographics remain real. Domestic demand potential remains real. The political stability that enables long-term planning remains intact. The institutional market infrastructure is better than it has ever been.

But structural potential is not the same as structural delivery. The gap between what India's story promises and what it consistently delivers — in earnings per share, in globally competitive companies, in predictable regulatory environments, in real income growth for the median household — is the gap that the derating is closing.

Investors who bought the India story at 25x or 28x forward earnings were paying for a future that is arriving, but later and more modestly than they assumed. That is not a new lesson. It is the same lesson that Indian equity markets have administered, periodically and without apology, to those who confuse a compelling narrative with a guaranteed outcome.

The current period of underperformance may be nearing its end. Valuations are more reasonable. The domestic institutional base is structurally supportive. The FY27 earnings cycle, if it delivers, could re-establish the growth narrative that justifies a premium over peers.

But the condition of a sustained return to premium is clear: India must begin delivering on the scale that the narrative has always promised. Companies of genuine global quality. Policy environments that attract rather than frighten long-term capital. Real income growth for the majority, not just the top decile.

Until those conditions are met, the premium will remain, at best, moderate.

And moderate is not what India's story was supposed to be.

Also read

What’s bothering Indian equity markets

Overcome the inertia first, rest will follow

Democracy, Demography and Demand

New 3Ds - disappointment, dismay and disillusion

Demographic accountability



Tuesday, June 9, 2026

What’s bothering Indian equity markets

There is a particular kind of pain that is harder to bear than an outright crash. It is the slow, grinding disappointment of a market that refuses to go anywhere — up or down — for so long that investors begin to wonder whether they have misread something fundamental. Indian equities have been delivering precisely that experience for the better part of two years.


For the 24 months ending 5th June 2026, the Nifty 50 and the Nifty Smallcap 100 have yielded essentially nothing — zero return, net of the daily noise. The Nifty Midcap 100 has managed a modest positive, but even that flatters a journey that included a sharp crash and an equally sharp recovery in the intervening months, implying a CAGR of less than 5% for the period. This is what a time correction looks like. Not a bear market. Not a recovery. Just stagnation, dressed up in daily volatility to keep you from sleeping.

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The global context makes the domestic picture worse. In a period when most of the world's major equity markets have delivered strong returns — Korea up 93% in USD terms year-to-date, Taiwan up 55%, Japan up 29%, MSCI EM up 25% — Indian equities have fallen 15% in USD terms in 2026 alone. And on the ten-year measure that strips out shorter-term noise: MSCI EM has now outperformed MSCI India with a 10-year CAGR of 8.1% versus India's 7.4%.


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For an index that has historically commanded a 73% P/E premium over EM — a premium built on three decades of structural optimism about India's potential — this is a significant and humbling reckoning.

The valuation picture

Before asking why this has happened, it is worth being precise about what has happened to valuations.

As per the Motilal Oswal Bulls & Bears Valuations Handbook for June 2026:

·         The 12-month forward P/E of the Nifty 50 stands at 18.6x, against a 10-year average of 21x — an 11% discount to history.

·         The 12-month forward P/B ratio is 2.7x, against a 10-year average of 2.9x — a 5% discount.

·         India's market cap to GDP ratio has corrected from 129% in March 2024 to 115% in March 2026. Still above the long-term average of 87%, but no longer in the exuberant territory of 2024.

·         The PE premium of MSCI India over MSCI EM has collapsed from a historical average of 73% — and a peak of 150% in November 2022 — to a moderate 17% as of end-May 2026.

These are not crisis-level numbers. The Nifty is not cheap in any absolute sense. But the direction is unambiguous: the premium that India has historically commanded over its peers is being systematically stripped away.

It is time to ask the question; we have avoided asking for a long time — is the India premium still deserved?

…to continue tomorrow

Thursday, June 4, 2026

India markets - two extremes, and something in the middle

India's consumer economy is not a single story moving in one direction. It is at least two stories moving in opposite directions simultaneously. Investors who treat it as one thing are likely to be surprised — in both directions. Those who understand the split, and position accordingly, may find it one of the more durable structural themes of this decade.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Exercise caution in the peace trade

Markets are growing complacent

With each passing day, global markets appear to be becoming increasingly sanguine about the situation in West Asia. A growing chorus of analysts and business leaders are expressing confidence that the conflict will wind down soon, and that energy markets will revert to their pre-war equilibrium within a matter of months. Some have gone further, predicting that energy prices could settle at materially lower levels than those that prevailed before hostilities began — a scenario premised on the easing of American sanctions on Iranian and Russian crude, alongside a ramping up of production by Venezuela and the UAE, which now operates outside its OPEC quota constraint.

I would suggest investors approach this “peace trade” with considerably more caution than current sentiment suggests. The probability is high that markets have already largely discounted the peace dividend — including the normalization of commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. Positioning for a windfall that is already in the price is not a trade; it is a hope.

Energy prices will not snap back instantly

Even if the Strait of Hormuz were to reopen tomorrow, a return to pre-conflict energy price levels is far from assured. The physical infrastructure damaged during the conflict may take several months to restore to operational pre-war capacity. Beyond the supply mechanics, the fiscal break-even levels for crude oil in several Gulf states — notably Saudi Arabia and Bahrain — may have risen materially during the conflict period, driven by expanded defence and welfare commitments. Producers at elevated break-evens have little incentive to flood the market.

For the world’s major energy importers — concentrated in Asia and Europe — a sustained period of higher energy costs leaves a lasting imprint on the terms of trade, keeping inflationary pressures elevated long after a formal truce is announced. The inflationary overhang, compounded by the fiscal pressures that governments have taken on to cushion the economic blows of war, has pushed the timeline for meaningful policy rate cuts further into the future.

Bond markets are, accordingly, struggling. A truce in West Asia is unlikely to offer them immediate relief. For India in particular, the case for near-term rate hikes — rather than cuts — may in fact strengthen in the months following any ceasefire, as the rupee finds its new level and imported inflation feeds through domestic price indices.

Equities: Resilience has limited the upside

The behavior of risk assets throughout the conflict has been, in a word, surprising. Equity investors’ appetite for risk has held up with a tenacity that few would have predicted when hostilities began. That resilience is admirable from a behavioral standpoint, but it carries a practical cost: it has substantially compressed the room available for a dramatic post-truce rebound in equities and other higher-risk instruments.

In my view, returns in the post-truce environment will be primarily a function of earnings growth rather than multiple expansion. A broad macro trade — the kind of re-rating that follows a genuine risk-off episode — is unlikely to materialize in the near term. The case for an immediate PE re-rating is simply not there.

The more productive tactical opportunity is likely to emerge from sector rotation rather than from an index-level trade. Sectors that have been beaten down during the conflict — IT services and FMCG chief among them — may outperform the currently favored themes: power infrastructure, data centers, and defence. However, this rotation trade is not without risk: IT services faces a structural headwind from AI-driven efficiency pressures on technology budgets, while FMCG grapples with volume growth in a consumer environment compressed by negative real wages.

India’s problems run deeper than the war

This brings me to the more uncomfortable argument. A meaningful segment of investors appears to believe that India’s market difficulties are substantially, if not primarily, a product of the West Asia conflict, and that resolution of that conflict will provide a correspondingly powerful tailwind. I think that view is mistaken, and potentially costly.

India is contending with a multitude of structural problems that will not dissolve with a ceasefire. On the macroeconomic front: the current account deficit has widened under the weight of elevated energy import costs; net FDI has turned negative; FII outflows have been persistent and large over multiple years; the rupee has been among the worst-performing major currencies; and the government’s fiscal space is contracting simultaneously from multiple directions — expanded defence spending, subsidy commitments, and weakening tax revenue in a slowing economy.

The demographic picture adds a longer-horizon concern. India’s Total Fertility Rate has remained below the replacement threshold of 2.1 for five consecutive years, standing at 1.9 in 2024. The urban TFR has fallen to 1.5 — a level comparable to ageing Western European societies. The window for harvesting a demographic dividend, in the economically dominant urban half of the country, has effectively already closed. This is not a cyclical problem that a peace settlement will address.

The climate emergency compounds these pressures. In April and May 2026, all fifty of the world’s hottest cities were located within India on multiple days. Agricultural output is under threat. Power grids are strained. Water scarcity has intensified. These are not episodic shocks; they are structural forces that will weigh on productivity, public finances, and social stability for the foreseeable future — independent of what happens in the Strait of Hormuz.

There are governance and institutional dimensions as well. Investor confidence in the consistency of regulatory enforcement, the independence of the judiciary, and the quality of economic policymaking has been eroding. Corporate India, despite tripling net profits between FY21 and FY25, has cut private investment as a share of GDP to a twenty-year low, with promoters opting to accumulate cash, establish family offices, and increase overseas allocations rather than deploy capital productively at home. This is not the behavior of a business community that is broadly optimistic about the domestic investment environment.

Conclusion: Price in the complexity

The peace trade is a legitimate market theme, and a ceasefire in West Asia would unquestionably remove a source of uncertainty that has weighed on global sentiment. But investors who expect that outcome to resolve India’s investment challenges are, in my view, underestimating the complexity of what lies underneath.

The macro headwinds are structural, not cyclical. The demographic dividend is narrowing. The climate crisis is intensifying. Institutional confidence is fragile. Corporate investment remains suppressed. A truce will not, by itself, resolve any of these. Position size your peace trade accordingly.

और भी दुख हैं ज़माने में मोहब्बत के सिवा
राहतें और भी हैं वस्ल की राहत के सिवा

— Faiz Ahmed Faiz


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Hope could drive you insane

In a striking illustration of India's deepening climate emergency, on multiple days in April and May 2026, all fifty of the world's hottest cities were located within Indian borders — a record corroborated by real-time temperature tracking platform AQI.in. Uttar Pradesh accounted for more than half of those cities, with temperatures hovering between 43°C and 44°C across scores of districts, while parts of Maharashtra's Vidarbha region breached 46°C.

Yet searing temperatures are only one dimension of a multi-front crisis. Large swaths of the country are simultaneously contending with devastating heatwaves, violent sandstorms, acute water shortages, and frequent power outages. A severe wildfire has raged through Uttarakhand. Crops are withering under abnormally high temperatures. Livestock are succumbing to heat and drought. Ordinary citizens are suffering heat-related illnesses alongside water and electricity shortfalls. And the broader economy is straining under high inflation, widening fiscal and trade deficits, a depreciating currency, and rising bond yields.

Compounding the material hardship is a crisis of reputation and governance. Avoidable foreign policy missteps, unpredictable economic decisions, a chronic accountability deficit, and systemic mismanagement have eroded India's standing both at home and abroad.

Warnings Ignored

None of this should have come as a surprise. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issued advance warnings of above-normal summer temperatures months before the season began. Global climate agencies had been signaling the likelihood of a strong El Niño event — and potentially a super El Niño — since at least February of this year. Heatwaves, water scarcity, wildfires, and grid overload are precisely the contingencies that governments and disaster-management authorities should have anticipated and prepared for in advance.

War clouds had been gathering over West Asia for several years. Energy-price shocks, inflationary pressures, and supply-chain disruptions were the very minimum that any forward-looking administration should have modelled and mitigated against.

None of this preparatory work appears to have been done. Rather than acknowledging the gathering risks, the government remained in denial — and, according to multiple reports, actively disseminated reassuring but misleading information to the public until state elections had concluded.

An existential threat demanding existential urgency

The stakes extend far beyond any single political cycle. Some credible research published recently projects that heat-related mortality in India could escalate several-fold under high-emissions scenarios in the coming decades. One study estimates that annual heat deaths across South Asia could exceed 400,000 by 2045, with India bearing the heaviest burden. Since 1990, one quarter of all heat-related excess deaths globally have occurred in India.

Meanwhile, India's Himalayan glaciers are retreating at an alarming rate. Studies by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) indicate that approximately 75% of Himalayan glaciers are in retreat, and research from the University of Leeds found that Himalayan ice loss over recent decades has occurred at a rate ten times higher than the long-run historical average. Major river systems — the Ganga, Yamuna, Indus, and Brahmaputra — face long-term threats to their base flows, imperiling agriculture, drinking water, and hydroelectric power for hundreds of millions of people.

A government genuinely alive to these existential stakes would be mobilizing resources, reforming institutions, and communicating urgently with citizens. Instead, the policy agenda has featured landmark statue construction and road-building projects of questionable strategic priority.

The youth crisis: Anxiety, aspiration, and despair

The mismanagement of competitive and school examinations has added yet another dimension to the crisis. The cumulative effect on young people is measurable. According to data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), over 40 per cent of all suicides in India are committed by those below the age of 30 — a share that represents roughly double the global average for that age cohort, according to experts at AIIMS. In 2022, 1.71 lakh suicides were recorded in India; among the young, this figure marked a 27 per cent rise compared to 2018.

The broader social picture is equally sobering. Affluent Indians are increasingly seeking to emigrate or to secure foreign residency for their children. Those without such options face a system that offers diminishing returns on effort and aspiration.

Investor confidence is wavering. Entrepreneurs are deferring capital allocation. The economic dynamism that India's demographic dividend was supposed to generate remains frustratingly latent.

The danger of hope deferred

An overwhelming majority of Indians appear to be sustaining themselves on hope — the expectation that conditions will improve, that governance will strengthen, that the arc of the country's trajectory bends, eventually, toward better days.

That hope is neither irrational nor unwarranted. India possesses extraordinary reserves of talent, entrepreneurship, and resilience. But hope, unaccompanied by accountability and action, is a fragile vessel.

As the character Red — played by Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption — observed with characteristic economy: “Hope is a dangerous thing. It can drive you insane.” The line resonates differently when the hope in question is that of a nation waiting for its institutions to deliver on their most basic obligations.

India's crises — climatic, institutional, and social — are not destiny. They are the cumulative product of choices: choices about what to prioritize, what to acknowledge, and whom to hold accountable. Different choices remain possible. But they require, first, an honest reckoning with the scale of what is already unfolding. 



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Demographic Dividend on Borrowed Time

The 2024 Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report, released by the Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India, confirms with little ambiguity what we have been anticipating for some years: India is no longer a young, fast-multiplying nation racing toward a demographic windfall. It is a country in the middle of a structural demographic pivot, one that carries serious implications for growth, fiscal policy, and market valuations. The data covers the calendar year 2024 and was published in May 2026.