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ESC

Rise in Middle-Class Vulnerability

22 May 2026
5 min

In Summary

  • India faces a middle-class crisis due to job scarcity, stagnant wages, and rising costs, impacting demand and stability.
  • Geopolitical factors, welfare exclusion, gender disparities, and corporate concentration exacerbate middle-class vulnerability.
  • Government initiatives like tax relief, housing schemes, and skill development aim to alleviate these economic pressures.

In Summary

Why in the News?

Despite strong GDP growth, a middle-class crisis threatens demand, stability, and India's demographic dividend, as rising geo-economic uncertainty deepens India's Middle-Class Vulnerability.

Middle-Class Economic Crisis

  • Lack of job creation: The formal job market is failing to absorb the 8 million new graduates entering the workforce each year.
    • The unemployment rate for graduates stands at 29.1%, nine times higher than for those who never attended school.
  • Eroding traditional employment: Technological Displacement, driven by the rapid adoption of automation and artificial intelligence (AI), is removing routine cognitive jobs such as clerical work and IT services.
  • Stagnant or declined real wages: Over the past decade, middle-income households saw an income growth of just 0.4% CAGR (2012-23 to 2023-24).
  • Surging cost of living: Essential expenses like housing, education, and healthcare are seeing double-digit annual inflation and about 30% of Indian households have debt.
  • Infrastructure Deficit: It increases the hidden Costs of living due to frequent power outages, erratic water supply and poor digital connectivity, necessitating costly private backups.
    • Poor road infrastructure, public transit limitations, and traffic congestion result in lost productive hours.

Other reasons for the rising middle-class vulnerability

  • Geopolitical impact: Increasing shortage of energy and fertilizers and rising food prices can hamper a large population and livelihood due to the war in West Asia and the Ukraine-Russia war.
  • Welfare Exclusion: While lower-income groups are experiencing upward mobility supported by government welfare schemes, the middle class, which contributes 53% of all income tax filings, remains ineligible for these safety nets.
  • Patriarchy and Gender Disparities: Combined with gender pay gaps and workplace discrimination, this underutilization of the female workforce leaves families highly vulnerable to single-income shocks.
  • In India, the labour force participation rate among females is 32.4% and among males is 77.6% for 2025 (World Bank).
  • Persistent caste-based economic stratification: It continues to shape opportunities, contributing to an uneven distribution of wealth within the middle class itself.
    • More than 66% of Group C safai karmacharis employed across the central government come from SC, ST, or OBC backgrounds. (Department of Personnel and Training's annual report 2024-25).
  • Corporate Concentration: The liberalization of the economy has concentrated market power in the hands of a few large corporations, impacting traditional middle-class entrepreneurs, business owners, etc.

Middle income class

  • Definition
    • Though, there is no specific definition of the middle-income class, yet different approaches have been used to define them. Some of them being: 
      • Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) considers those whose earnings are in the range of US $10 to US $100 per day to be the middle-income class in purchasing power parity terms.
      • The People Research on India's Consumer Economy (PRICE): Defines the middle-income class household with an annual income of Rs. 5 lakhs to Rs. 30 lakhs (at 2020-21 prices). 
    • Therefore, they can be regarded as the socio-cultural groups which are economically secure with little chance of falling into poverty or vulnerability. 
  • World Bank's lower middle income poverty line:  The share of Indians living below it has fallen sharply from over 50% a decade ago to roughly 30% in recent estimates.
    • The international poverty line also called the extreme poverty line is revised from $2.15 to $3.00, while the two other poverty lines more applicable to lower-middle and upper-middle income countries are revised from $3.65 to $4.20 and from $6.85 to $8.30, respectively.

Implications of middle-class vulnerability 

  • Economic Consequences
    • Impact on growth: It poses a severe threat to India's broader macroeconomic stability as the middle class drives nearly 60% of domestic consumption.
    • Depleted Savings and Capital: India's net household financial savings fell to a historic low of roughly 5 % of GDP, primarily due to rising retail debt and inflation impacting capital supply in the economy.
    • Widening Wealth Inequality: The hollowing out of the middle class is accelerating the divide between the rich and the rest as the top 1% captures over 22% of national income. (World Inequality Lab)
  • Socio-Political Consequences
    • Social Consequences: Anxiety and depression medications are seeing massive sales growth, and financial stress is increasingly linked to a rising number of suicides among salaried urban professionals and students.
      • According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) statistics, suicides due to financial stress rose from 4,970 in 2018 to over 7,000 in 2022.
    • Trapped Mobility: As financial constraints tighten, middle-class families are forced to make difficult trade-offs such as delaying preventive healthcare, lower-quality education; severely threatens the human capital development of the next generation.
    • Brain Drain: The lack of secure, well-paying jobs and declining quality of life is driving skilled professionals to migrate abroad in search of better opportunities, further depriving the domestic economy of valuable talent.

Government Initiatives for alleviating middle class vulnerability

  • Direct Income Tax Relief: Under the reformed income tax structures under Union Budget 2025-26, individuals earning up to ₹12 Lakh per annum are effectively exempted from income tax liability.
  • Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana-Urban (PMAY-U 2.0): Rolled out to construct, purchase, or rent affordable housing for urban poor and middle-class families.
  • Ayushman Bharat (AB-PMJAY) Expansion: Health assurance (up to ₹5 Lakh) has been expanded to cover all senior citizens aged 70 and above, regardless of socio-economic status.
  • Skill India & PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY): Focuses on aligning industrial demands with youth competencies, offering rapid certifications in technology, automation etc.
  • Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana (PMMY):  Designed to facilitate easy, collateral-free micro credit to non-corporate, non-farm small and micro entrepreneurs for income-generating activities. 
  • Regulatory Consumer Protections: The enforcement of RERA (Real Estate Regulatory Authority) and the stabilization of stalled housing projects via specialized investment vehicles like the SWAMIH Fund.

Way Forward

A more inclusive development approach, as suggested by the World Bank policy paper, proposes shifting welfare analysis from merely counting those below the poverty line to measuring how far people are from a reasonable standard of living, using well-being as a spectrum and giving greater weight to those furthest behind. Adopting tools like a Multi-Dimensional Vulnerability Index can help policymakers identify those most at risk and design targeted interventions. 

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RELATED TERMS

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Multi-Dimensional Vulnerability Index

A tool or framework used to assess vulnerability across multiple dimensions (e.g., economic, social, health, environmental) rather than relying solely on income-based poverty measures. It helps identify individuals or groups most at risk.

SWAMIH Fund

Stressed Assets, Investment and Information Management Asset Reconstruction Company's Fund. Launched in 2019, it is a Special Window Investment Fund to provide last-mile financing to stalled affordable and mid-income housing projects. Its objective is to ensure the completion of these projects, thereby benefiting homebuyers and the real estate sector.

RERA

Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act. A crucial Indian legislation aimed at regulating the real estate sector, protecting buyer interests, promoting transparency, and ensuring timely project completion.

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