International Journal of Contemporary Research In Multidisciplinary, 2025;4(5):178-184
India’s External Sector, Financial Dynamics and Labour Market Evolution in 2024–25: Resilience & Transformation
Author Name: Dr. Amrit Varsha;
Paper Type: research paper
Article Information
Abstract:
This research paper investigates India’s macroeconomic resilience and transformational trajectory in 2024–25 by examining four critical dimensions: external sector dynamics, capital account flows, financial intermediation, and labour market evolution. In the external sector, merchandise exports grew by 1.6% year-on-year between April and December 2024, while imports rose by 5.2%, widening the goods trade deficit. However, a robust services trade surplus—elevating India to the seventh-largest global services exporter—and record remittance inflows helped contain the current account deficit at 1.2% of GDP in Q2 FY25. Private transfers, driven by expanded employment opportunities in OECD countries, emerged as a key stabilizer.
On the capital account front, gross foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows increased by 17.9% during April–November 2024, second only to FY21 levels, even as repatriations rose by 33.2%, reflecting mature exit mechanisms and investor confidence. The inclusion of Indian government securities in the JP Morgan Emerging Markets Bond Index spurred foreign portfolio investment in debt, contributing to a peak foreign exchange reserve of US$704.9 billion in September 2024—covering 90% of external debt and over ten months of imports.
Within the domestic financial sector, scheduled commercial banks sustained double-digit credit growth, driven by housing and services, despite regulatory tightening such as higher risk weights on unsecured retail loans. Industrial credit also began to recover, albeit at a slower pace.
The labour market showcased significant formalisation and job growth: the unemployment rate declined from 6.0% in 2017–18 to 3.2% in 2023–24, the labour force participation rate rose to 60.1%, and net EPFO subscriptions more than doubled from 61 lakh in FY19 to 131 lakh in FY24, with youth accounting for nearly half of new additions.
The paper concludes that strategic export diversification, enhanced technology partnerships in high-value sectors—such as biotechnology, semiconductors, and quantum technologies—and focused upskilling for an AI-augmented workforce are imperative to sustain growth, deepen resilience, and reinforce India’s global economic standing.
Keywords:
Services exports, remittances, FDI, FPI, bank credit growth, labour market formalisation, artificial intelligence
How to Cite this Article:
Dr. Amrit Varsha. India’s External Sector, Financial Dynamics and Labour Market Evolution in 2024–25: Resilience & Transformation. International Journal of Contemporary Research in Multidisciplinary. 2025: 4(5):178-184
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