IMF projects Bangladesh to overtake India in per capita GDP in 2026
When the International Monetary Fund (IMF) released its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) database on April 14, one data point quickly made its way through financial markets and newsrooms.
Bangladesh is projected to record a higher gross domestic product per capita than India in 2026, measured in current US dollars. The forecast puts Bangladesh at $2,911 per person against India at $2,812. The difference is small in absolute terms, but its symbolism is significant.
India’s economy, valued at $3,916 billion in 2025, is roughly eight times the size of Bangladesh’s $458 billion. It is also one of the most closely watched growth stories in the world. Yet on this narrow measure, the smaller neighbour appears set to edge ahead.
The reaction in India was swift. Kaushik Basu, former chief economist of the World Bank, described the development as "shocking". Indian commentators debated whether the figure reflected a deeper structural divergence or merely a statistical quirk.
The answer, as is so often the case with economic data, is: both.
Measured in current dollars, Bangladesh led India in per capita income for seven years from 2018.
India moved ahead in 2025 after the Bangladeshi taka weakened sharply. This is not without precedent.
Bangladesh was also ahead of India in per capita GDP between 1989 and 2002.
India then pulled in front for around 15 years before slipping below Bangladesh in 2018.
The rupee's own depreciation against the dollar in the subsequent period then swung the comparison back.
According to the latest projections, Bangladesh is set to move ahead in 2026 by roughly $100 per person.
The IMF expects India to regain the lead in 2027 and to remain ahead at least until 2031.
To understand why this measure is so volatile, consider the arithmetic.
GDP per capita in current dollars is calculated by converting each country's output into US dollars at the prevailing exchange rate.
When a currency depreciates — as both the taka and the rupee have done in recent years, though at different speeds — it compresses the dollar value of output regardless of how productive the underlying economy has become.
The crossing of the two lines in 2026, seen on any given screen, tells us something real: that exchange-rate dynamics now place the two economies' dollar incomes within touching distance of each other. It does not, on its own, tell us which population is better off.
The second measure complicates the picture considerably. The IMF also publishes GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP), which strips out exchange-rate movements and instead converts output into a common "international dollar" based on what each currency can actually buy domestically.
On this basis, India leads Bangladesh by a wide margin — and always has in the modern era.
In 2025, India's PPP-adjusted GDP per capita stands at $11,789 — some 15 percent above Bangladesh's $10,271.
By 2031, the IMF projects the gap will widen to nearly 24 percent, with India reaching $18,485 against Bangladesh's $14,857.
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