HomeNewsOpinionHindu Rate of Growth: A concept that has lost its meaning and why it needs to be junked

Hindu Rate of Growth: A concept that has lost its meaning and why it needs to be junked

Sanghnomics: The term ‘Hindu rate of growth’ was used to categorise Hindu society as historically laggard in the sphere of economic activities. It is still widely used but the stigma must be done away with as the country is on a path of decolonisation under the Narendra Modi government

May 06, 2024 / 10:21 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
india economy
India is on a path of decolonisation under the Narendra Modi government.

(Sanghnomics is a weekly column that tracks down and demystifies the economic world view of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and organisations inspired by its ideology.)

With the Indian economy consistently performing well over the last decade and India becoming the fifth largest economy within a short span of the last 10-years, time has come to challenge the term ‘Hindu rate of growth’.

Story continues below Advertisement

Hindu Rate of Growth: Marxist Maxim 

This term was coined by Marxist economist Raj Krishna in 1978 to denote the slow pace of growth of the Indian economy from the 1950s onwards. The Indian economy grew during the first three decades at a growth rate of less than four percent and Raj Krishna defined it as ‘Hindu rate of growth’. This notorious and misleading maxim is still used widely by economists and students of economics are made to study it all over the country.