New Delhi: India’s target of ranking third globally by 2028 encounters obstacles due to rupee decline and US dollar appreciation, according to recent IMF figures quoted by Moneycontrol.
The nation fell to sixth in 2025 at $3.92 trillion GDP, lagging the UK’s $4 trillion, but continues as the fastest-growing major economy driven by solid domestic momentum.
In 2024, India ranked fifth at $3.5 trillion, edging out the UK ($3.4 trillion). The US dominates first with $30.8 trillion, China second at $19.6 trillion, Germany third ($4.7 trillion), and Japan fourth ($4.44 trillion). Nominal dollar rankings amplify currency swings, underscoring how exchange rates reshape perceptions of economic power.
Rupee Strain Amid Global Headwinds
The rupee’s drop over the past year comes from steady US dollar rises due to high US interest rates, world tensions, and investors rushing to safe options; this has hurt emerging currencies like India’s, cutting dollar GDP gains despite nearly 7% real growth from strong consumer spending, services, and manufacturing.
Charting the Climb Back
IMF projections show India returning to fourth by 2027 at $4.58 trillion GDP (beating UK’s $4.47 trillion) and hitting third by 2031 at $6.79 trillion (topping Japan’s $5.13 trillion), thanks to strong basics despite currency ups and downs.












