India to be leading economic superpower by 2030: Survey

December 16, 2009 07:42 pm | Updated 08:27 pm IST - New Delhi

The Infosys campus in Chennai, one of the leading IT companies in India. A survey says India is now on course to outstrip developed nations like USA, Japan, Germany and China

The Infosys campus in Chennai, one of the leading IT companies in India. A survey says India is now on course to outstrip developed nations like USA, Japan, Germany and China

India is poised to take over the developed countries to emerge at the top of the heap in the global economic superpower league by 2030, says a survey.

More than half of the respondents (53 per cent) of a survey commissioned by London-based independent think-tank Legatum Institute said India is likely to be the world’s most important economic power by 2030.

According to the respondents of the survey, India is now on course to outstrip developed nations such as the USA, Japan, Germany and the fast-emerging economic giant China over the next two decades.

The survey, which questioned nearly 2,400 Indian senior managers, entrepreneurs and aspiring entrepreneurs said the levels of confidence among the country’s wealth-creators is very high, with nearly nine in ten saying they expected India to be in a stronger economic position in the next five years.

Only one in five said the world economic crisis had badly affected business in India, the survey said.

India is already moving up the economic league tables as the 12th largest economy in the world, as per the World Bank.

Besides, it also ranked 45th in the internationally respected 2009 Legatum Prosperity Index - which embraces social and political data to provide a wider measure of national success.

About two-thirds of the respondents said Indians were more entrepreneurial than people from other countries and 84 per cent said their country was going in the right direction.

Beyond making money, Indian entrepreneurs are also highly motivated by the broader social impact of their work. Over half (54 per cent) of respondents say the social effects of their business, such as improving the quality of life in their communities or developing people, are a main motivation for what they do, the survey said.

Meanwhile, the survey has also pointed out certain factors, which can negatively impact India’s economic future.

“Over half of the respondents say that corruption is a serious problem that hurts business in India, and 40 per cent say they have been pressured to pay a bribe,” the survey said.

Other factors which may affect the growth of Indian economy include lack of access to finance and tardy government bureaucracy.

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