The global economic order has shifted. India has overtaken Japan to become the world’s third largest economy, according to latest IMF data. For British workers still reeling from stagnant wages and a cost of living crisis, this is not just a geopolitical headline. It is a mirror held up to our own economic malaise.
India’s GDP now stands at $4.7 trillion, propelled by a manufacturing boom, a young workforce, and aggressive infrastructure spending. While Britain grapples with a shrinking share of global trade, India’s exports have surged by 18% in the past year. The subcontinent is now the factory floor for everything from pharmaceuticals to electronics, filling the gap left by China’s slowing growth.
But let’s talk about what this means for the average person. In Mumbai, a textile worker earns around £150 a month. In Manchester, a similar role might pay £1,800. Yet the cost of a loaf of bread in Mumbai is 30p, while in Manchester it’s £1.20. Wages may be lower in India, but so is the cost of living. The real story here is about purchasing power parity, which India has long boasted as a strength. This new nominal GDP ranking, however, signals something deeper: India is no longer just a low-cost back office. It is becoming a consumer market in its own right.
For British policymakers, the lesson is stark. The UK’s growth has been propped up by services and financial speculation. Meanwhile, India has invested in physical infrastructure and labour-intensive manufacturing. The result: wage growth in India’s formal sector has been averaging 6% a year, while UK real wages have barely moved since 2008. The strikes we have seen across the NHS, railways, and Royal Mail are symptoms of that stagnation. India’s rise should prompt uncomfortable questions about our own industrial strategy. Where is our equivalent of the ‘Make in India’ campaign?
There is a regional dimension too. India’s growth has been uneven: booming cities like Bangalore and Delhi contrast with rural poverty. But the central government’s focus on building roads, ports, and digital networks has begun to narrow that gap. In the UK, the North-South divide remains entrenched. The government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda has produced more white papers than actual progress. Our manufacturing heartlands have been left to rust, while London’s financial sector enjoys the spoils of globalisation.
The political implications are significant. India’s rise strengthens its hand in negotiations over trade deals and climate policy. The UK is scrambling for a post-Brexit trade agreement with India, but the leverage has shifted. India can now afford to be picky. It will demand easier visa rules for its tech workers, something that will test the government’s promise to cut net migration.
None of this is to downplay India’s challenges: persistent inequality, a fragile banking sector, and environmental degradation. But its trajectory is undeniably upward. For British workers, the question is not whether to compete with India. It is whether we can learn from its playbook. That means rebuilding our industrial base, investing in skills, and ensuring that growth reaches the kitchen table rather than just the spreadsheet.
The 3rd largest economy label is a milestone. But milestones are only as meaningful as the lives they improve. If India’s rise lifts millions out of poverty, it is a success. If Britain’s decline continues to leave its own people behind, it is a warning.







