India Surpasses Japan as 4th Largest Economy: What India Needs to Overtake Germany by 2028

India

India has surpassed Japan to claim the world’s fourth-largest economy spot with a nominal GDP of $4.18 trillion, positioning it just behind the US, China, and Germany as of late 2025. Government data and IMF projections confirm this milestone, driven by 8.2% real GDP growth in Q2 2025-26 amid robust domestic demand and industrial expansion.

Path to Overtaking Germany

India trails Germany’s estimated $5 trillion economy by about $800 billion but could close the gap in 2.5-3 years, potentially reaching third place by 2028 with a projected $5.58-$7.3 trillion GDP. NITI Aayog CEO B.V.R. Subrahmanyam highlighted sustained high growth over multiple years as key, rather than one-off cyclical boosts, with official IMF confirmation expected in H1 2026.

Germany faces headwinds like zero growth in 2025 and modest 0.9% recovery in 2026 due to trade tensions, while India’s momentum—doubling GDP from $2.1 trillion in 2015—outpaces peers. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal noted India’s superior expansion versus G7, G20, and BRICS nations over the past decade.

Key Growth Drivers

Strong domestic consumption, a young workforce, and digital transformation fuel India’s ascent, alongside manufacturing/services expansion and FDI inflows.

  • Government initiatives like Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat boost infrastructure and self-reliance.
  • RBI forecasts 7.3% GDP growth for 2025-26, outstripping global majors.
  • Demographic edge: India supplies working-age talent to aging Japan (15,000 nurses) and Germany (20,000 healthcare workers).

India’s economy added $1 trillion every 1.5 years recently, eyeing $10 trillion by 2032 and potentially second globally by 2047 ($30 trillion).

Challenges Ahead

Sustaining 6-8% growth demands manufacturing revival, job creation for 1.4 billion people, and avoiding the middle-income trap.

  • Per capita GDP lags at ~$3,000 vs Germany’s $60,000; focus needed on quality growth, not just size.
  • Reforms in education, healthcare, and knowledge economy to match global standards.
  • Trade barriers (e.g., potential US tariffs) and geopolitical risks could slow progress.

Experts emphasize private sector ambition in services like law/accounting and leveraging population stability as others shrink. While rankings celebrate scale, true success lies in broad-based prosperity and competitiveness.

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