レポート
Health as a catalyst for economic growth
Population health is a foundational enabler of India’s 2047 growth ambition. To become a $30–$40 trillion economy by 2047, India must fully harness its demographic dividend (2019–53). It must also treat population health as a core input to productivity, human capital formation, and sustained economic growth—not just as a social imperative. Global evidence on this issue is consistent: Healthier countries are structurally wealthier, and sustained investment in health is closely associated with long-term prosperity.
Despite meaningful progress, disease burden remains a material economic constraint. Over the past decades, India has implemented multiple central- and state-level reforms that have strengthened financial protection, expanded system capacity, and improved select population health outcomes. Yet a persistently high disease burden continues to suppress workforce participation and productivity, resulting in an estimated $1 trillion annual opportunity cost.
Written in collaboration with
Written in collaboration with
Healthy lifespan gains can accelerate income growth. Longitudinal analyses across roughly 190 countries show a clear inflection point: Once health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE) exceeds 57 years, GDP per capita growth accelerates materially—with each additional year of HALE yielding approximately 7.5% higher GDP per capita. Countries that achieved 10-year HALE gains or more over the past three decades experienced roughly two times higher GDP per capita growth than peers with more modest improvements. China, South Korea, and Poland all exhibited this trajectory.
India’s HALE has already increased from approximately 50 to 61 years since 1990. Achieving an additional 10-year gain—to a HALE of 70 by 2047—could unlock a fivefold expansion in GDP per capita, increasing it from approximately $2,800 to $14,100. This jump could contribute 70% of the Viksit Bharat aspiration of reaching $18,000 to $20,000 GDP per capita.
The next step-change requires higher investment and integrated execution. While the National Health Policy 2017 catalyzed progress across life expectancy, immunization, sanitation, and select disease-control outcomes, critical targets on mortality, non-communicable disease outcomes, financing, infrastructure, and system integration remain unmet. Reaching the next frontier will require doubling health investment from approximately 3%–4% of GDP to 6%–7%, in line with global peers. In addition, India must institutionalize and integrate governance models. Financing, service delivery, workforce development, digital infrastructure, procurement, and performance management should align under a single accountable framework
Scaling prevention, infrastructure, and digital health will realize Viksit Bharat. Expanding prevention-embedded universal health coverage, building infrastructure and workforce capacity at pace, accelerating digital health adoption, and using policy levers to shift behaviors toward healthier living will be central to achieving India’s ambitions. Elevating health from a social priority to a core economic strategy is critical for India to realize its Viksit Bharat vision by 2047.
About NATHEALTH
NATHEALTH was created with the vision to “Be the credible and unified voice in improving access and quality of healthcare.” Leading healthcare service providers, medical technology providers (devices and equipment), diagnostic service providers, health insurance companies, health education institutions, healthcare publishers, and other stakeholders have come together to build it as a common platform to power the next wave of progress in Indian healthcare. NATHEALTH is an inclusive institution that has representation of small and medium hospitals and nursing homes. It is committed to working on its mission to encourage innovation, help bridge the skill and capacity gap, help shape policy and regulations, and enable the environment to fund long-term growth. NATHEALTH aims to help build a better and healthier future for both rural and urban India. For more information, please visit www.nathealthindia.org.