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India tops population table. Will the economy follow?

It is the world’s most populous nation. An Asian power with ancient roots, a rapidly modernizing economy, nuclear weapons, and a large military budget, it is intent on claiming what it sees as its rightful, top-table place in world affairs.

And it is not China.

Why We Wrote This

Becoming the most populous nation in the world gives India new geopolitical clout and economic potential. Has the country’s time really come?

It is India, which this week officially overtakes its giant neighbor’s population with a total of over 1.425 billion people.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, seeking to navigate his country’s way between China and the United States, faces another, perhaps more daunting challenge: to narrow the still-yawning economic gap between his nation and the two competing superpowers.

India has made remarkable economic progress in recent decades; poverty levels have fallen, educational levels have risen, and the country is attracting more foreign investment as international companies think twice about China.

But it still cannot provide enough jobs to employ its rising population. Mr. Modi seems to be counting on boosting investment, and despite doubts about his democratic credentials, Western governments seem ready to set their concerns aside.

After all, India is not China. And an economically successful, internationally assertive India could provide an important counterweight to China, in Asia and beyond.

It is the world’s most populous nation. An Asian power with ancient roots, a rapidly modernizing economy, nuclear weapons, and a large military budget, it is intent on claiming what it sees as its rightful, top-table place in world affairs.

And it is not China.

It is India, which this week officially overtakes its giant neighbor’s population with a total of over 1.425 billion people. That milestone comes a few months after India displaced Britain as the world’s fifth-largest economy. These are nicely timed fillips as Delhi prepares to host the G-20 summit this autumn.

Why We Wrote This

Becoming the most populous nation in the world gives India new geopolitical clout and economic potential. Has the country’s time really come?

Yet alongside huge promise, India faces huge challenges, at home and abroad.

And how its Hindu-nationalist prime minister, Narendra Modi, navigates these challenges – as China and America root for quite different outcomes – will have implications beyond India. They could impact relations between Washington and Beijing, and the shape of 21st-century world politics.

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