This MCQ module is based on: GDP, Sectoral & Human Development Comparison
GDP, Sectoral & Human Development Comparison
This assessment will be based on: GDP, Sectoral & Human Development Comparison
Upload images, PDFs, or Word documents to include their content in assessment generation.
8.4 Gross Domestic Product and the Sectoral Composition
One of the most-talked-about economic phenomena of the past four decades has been China's GDP? growth story. China today has the world's second largest GDP (PPP) at roughly $35 trillion, while India's GDP (PPP) stands at about $15 trillion and Pakistan's at about $1.5 trillion — only around 10 per cent of India's GDP. Put differently, India's GDP is about 42 per cent of China's GDP. Yet, until the 1980s, all three countries had similar growth rates and per-capita incomes. What changed?
| Country | 1980–90 | 2015–17 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|
| India | 5.7 | 7.3 | 6.5 |
| China | 10.3 | 6.8 | 5.0 |
| Pakistan | 6.3 | 5.3 | 3.1 |
Source: Key Indicators for Asia and Pacific 2025, Asian Development Bank; World Development Indicators 2024.
8.4.1 Growth Stories — Three Different Trajectories
When many developed countries were finding it difficult to maintain even a 5 per cent growth rate, China sustained near double-digit growth (10.3%) through the 1980s. In 1980–90 Pakistan (6.3%) was actually ahead of India (5.7%); China was at the top, India was at the bottom. Two decades on, the picture had shifted. By 2015–17, India had moved up to 7.3%, China had moderated to 6.8%, and Pakistan slowed to 5.3%. By 2024, India led at 6.5%, China at 5.0%, Pakistan further down to 3.1%.
Some scholars hold that the reform processes introduced in Pakistan and prolonged political instability are major reasons for its declining growth rate. India met with a moderate increase, while China showed normal moderation as it matured into a middle-income economy. We will now look at which sector contributed to these growth differentials.
8.4.2 Cultivable Land and the Farm Workforce
A first surprise: in China, due to topographic and climatic conditions, the area suitable for cultivation is relatively small — only about 10 per cent of China's total land area. The total cultivable area in China is just 40 per cent of India's cultivable area. Until the 1980s, more than 80 per cent of Chinese people depended on farming as their sole source of livelihood. Since then, the government has actively encouraged people to leave the fields and pursue handicrafts, commerce and transport. By 2021, only 23 per cent of China's workforce remained in agriculture, contributing 8 per cent to its Gross Value Added (GVA)?.
In India and Pakistan, the agricultural transformation has been slower. In India, agriculture's contribution to GVA was 18 per cent while it employed 43 per cent of the workforce. In Pakistan, agriculture contributed 24 per cent to GVA and engaged 36 per cent of the workforce. The persistent feature: a large share of workers stuck on a small slice of GVA — the classic mark of under-developed structural transformation.
8.5 Sectoral Composition of Output and Employment — Reading Table 8.3
| Sector | Contribution to GVA (%) | Distribution of Workforce (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | China | Pakistan | India | China | Pakistan | |
| Agriculture | 18 | 8 | 24 | 43 | 23 | 36 |
| Industry | 28 | 38 | 21 | 26 | 32 | 26 |
| Services | 54 | 54 | 55 | 31 | 45 | 38 |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Source: World Development Indicators Database 2024; Key Indicators of Asia and Pacific 2025.
8.5.1 Industry — China's Engine of Growth
In China, the industrial sector contributes 38 per cent to GDP and employs 32 per cent of the workforce. In India, industry accounts for 26 per cent of the workforce but produces 28 per cent of GDP. In Pakistan, 26 per cent of the workforce is in industry but produces just 21 per cent of GVA. China's industry has therefore been a genuinely productive source of growth — workforce share and output share are both high. India and Pakistan exhibit premature de-industrialisation — workers move from farms but skip the manufacturing stage entirely.
8.5.2 Services — The Common Engine, the Different Story
In all three countries, the service sector contributes the highest share of GDP: 54 per cent in India, 54 per cent in China and 55 per cent in Pakistan. But the workforce shares diverge — 31 per cent in India, 45 per cent in China and 38 per cent in Pakistan. In the normal course of development, countries first shift their employment and output from agriculture to industry, and then to services. This is what is happening in China.
For India and Pakistan, the workforce share in industry was low at 26 per cent, and the shift is taking place directly to the service sector. Comparing the 1980s to today, India, China and Pakistan employed 17, 12 and 27 per cent of their workforce respectively in services in the 1980s. By 2022 those numbers were 31, 45 and 38 per cent. Pakistan was actually the fastest shifter of workers into services in the 1980s, but its rate has since lagged.
NCERT poses a sharp question: do you think it is necessary for India and Pakistan to concentrate on the manufacturing sector as China does? Scholars also argue the service sector should not be considered an engine of growth. What do you think?
- List two reasons why services-led growth is risky as a long-term strategy.
- List two reasons why expanding manufacturing creates more jobs.
- What would you recommend India do — pivot to manufacturing or stay services-heavy?
8.6 Indicators of Human Development — Reading Table 8.5
You have studied human development indicators in earlier classes. Let us see how India, China and Pakistan have performed on the latest published numbers.
| Item | India | China | Pakistan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human Development Index (Value) | 0.685 | 0.797 | 0.544 |
| Rank (based on HDI) | 130 | 78 | 168 |
| Life Expectancy at Birth (years) | 72.0 | 78.0 | 67.6 |
| Mean Years of Schooling (15+, %) | 6.9 | 8.0 | 4.3 |
| GNI per capita (PPP US $)? | 9,047 | 22,029 | 5,501 |
| People Below Poverty Line (%, National) | 21.9* | 0.0** | 21.9** |
| Infant Mortality Rate (per 1,000 live births) | 25.5 | 4.8 | 51 |
| Maternal Mortality Rate (per 1 lakh births) | 103 | 23 | 154 |
| Basic Sanitation (% population) | 78 | 96 | 71 |
| Basic Drinking Water (% population) | 93 | 98 | 91 |
| Prevalence of Undernourishment (%) | 17 | 3 | 19 |
Note: (*) 2019–21; (**) 2023. Sources: Human Development Report 2025; World Development Indicators Metadata 2024.
8.6.1 China Ahead, India Middle, Pakistan Behind
Table 8.5 shows that China is moving ahead of India and Pakistan on most indicators. China's HDI value of 0.797 puts it at rank 78, while India's 0.685 places it at 130 and Pakistan's 0.544 at 168. This is true for income (GDP per capita), poverty headcount, mortality, sanitation and life expectancy. China's life expectancy is 78 years compared to India's 72 and Pakistan's 67.6.
8.6.2 Maternal Mortality — A Painful Gap
India and Pakistan have not been able to save women from maternal mortality. In China, only 23 women die per 1 lakh births, whereas in India and Pakistan, about 103 and 154 women die respectively. China and Pakistan are also ahead of India in reducing the proportion of people below the poverty line and in performance on sanitation. Surprisingly, all three countries report providing improved drinking water sources for most of their population.
8.6.3 Liberty Indicators — A Caveat
Important as the above indicators are, they are not sufficient. We also need liberty indicators — the extent of democratic participation in social and political decision-making, the constitutional protection of citizens' rights, the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law. One liberty indicator (democratic participation) has been added to the HDR but with no extra weight; others are still missing. Without these, the construction of a human development index may be said to be incomplete and its usefulness limited. This is precisely where India and Pakistan, with multi-party democracies, score better than China — but the standard HDI does not capture this difference.
While India has done relatively well on economic growth, it lags neighbours on human development. Why did we not invest enough in our human resources?
- Identify two areas where India underperforms compared to China.
- List the policy gaps that contributed to this lag.
- Suggest two corrective measures from the National Education Policy 2020 or Ayushman Bharat.
NCERT argues that China's lead on human development indicators was built largely before the 1978 reforms. What did pre-reform China do right that India and Pakistan did not?
- Name two pre-reform Chinese policies that boosted human development.
- How did the commune system contribute to equitable food distribution?
- Why is this a counter-intuitive finding for free-market economists?
🎯 Competency-Based Question — Sectoral Shift & HDI
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.