Productivity and real wages occupy a central place in the functioning of any modern economy because they determine both the capacity to produce goods and services and the purchasing power needed to consume them. Productivity reflects how efficiently labor, capital, technology, and institutions combine to generate output, while real wages represent the actual purchasing power of workers after accounting for inflation. Together, they shape aggregate demand, investment incentives, business profitability, and long-term economic growth. In India, where private consumption contributes a substantial share of gross domestic product, the relationship between productivity growth and wage growth has become increasingly important since 2014, a period marked by structural reforms, digitalization, infrastructure expansion, inflation targeting, the pandemic shock, and rapid technological change.
The classical expectation is that rising productivity
eventually leads to higher real wages. When workers produce more value per hour,
firms can afford to pay higher wages without sacrificing profitability. Higher
real wages increase household consumption, which stimulates demand for goods
and services, encouraging businesses to invest and expand. This creates a
virtuous cycle in which productivity, income, consumption, and investment
reinforce one another. Historically, many industrialized economies experienced
long periods during which productivity gains were broadly shared through wage
growth, helping create large middle classes and sustained domestic demand.
India's experience since 2014 has been more complex.
Productivity growth has generally improved across several sectors due to
infrastructure development, digital payments, logistics improvements,
formalization efforts, expansion of internet connectivity, and greater adoption
of technology. Manufacturing efficiency, financial inclusion, digital service
delivery, and productivity in organized services have benefited from these
changes. Research and policy assessments have continued to show improvements in
total factor productivity and labor productivity, particularly after the
adoption of inflation targeting and broader economic reforms.
Yet the transmission of productivity gains into
widespread real wage growth has been uneven. While skilled workers in
technology, finance, telecommunications, and specialized services have often
experienced rising incomes, wage growth among many informal workers,
agricultural laborers, and low-skilled urban employees has remained
considerably weaker. Studies examining income distribution after 2014 have
pointed to stagnation or even declines in real incomes among sections of the
rural population, especially small farmers and agricultural laborers.
In an ideal economy, real wages would broadly rise
alongside productivity, represented by a proportional relationship. However,
India's recent experience suggests that productivity growth and wage growth
have often diverged across sectors and income groups.
One reason lies in labor market structure. India
continues to have a large informal workforce, abundant labor supply, and
underemployment in both rural and urban areas. When labor supply grows faster
than the demand for labor, employers face limited pressure to raise wages even
when productivity improves. The bargaining power of workers remains
constrained, especially where employment is fragmented and unionization is
limited. As a result, productivity gains may be captured disproportionately by
capital owners, higher-skilled workers, or large firms rather than being
distributed broadly through wages.
The evolution of rural wages illustrates this
challenge. Earlier periods witnessed rapid rural wage growth, but policy
reports after 2014 documented a significant slowdown. The moderation reflected
lower inflation, changing public employment dynamics, and adjustments in labor
markets. Policymakers also noted that sustained real wage increases without
corresponding productivity gains are difficult to maintain over long periods.
Another important factor is technological change.
Automation, artificial intelligence, digital platforms, and advanced software
have enabled firms to produce more output with relatively smaller increases in
employment. Productivity can therefore rise even when job creation remains
modest. Recent business surveys indicate that many companies operating in India
are using technology to increase output and efficiency while maintaining
relatively stable workforce sizes. This phenomenon creates what economists
sometimes describe as "job-light growth," where economic output
expands more rapidly than employment and wage opportunities.
The divergence between productivity and real wages has
significant implications for aggregate demand. When productivity gains are
concentrated among higher-income groups, a smaller share of national income
reaches households with the highest propensity to consume. Wealthier households
tend to save a larger portion of additional income, while lower- and
middle-income households spend a greater share on consumption. Therefore, if
productivity gains do not translate into broad-based wage growth, overall
demand may expand more slowly than production capacity. This can create
concerns about insufficient consumer demand despite strong headline growth
figures.
India's post-2014 growth pattern has often generated
debates about whether growth has been broad-based or unevenly distributed.
Rising corporate profits, expanding stock markets, and increasing productivity
in organized sectors have not always been matched by equally strong growth in
mass purchasing power. Public discussions frequently highlight the perception
that economic growth feels stronger in aggregate statistics than in household
finances.
Inflation adds another layer of complexity. Even when
nominal wages rise, real wages may stagnate if prices increase at a similar or
faster pace. Since 2014, India has experienced periods of disinflation,
pandemic-related supply disruptions, commodity price shocks, food inflation,
and global energy market volatility. Inflation targeting by the Reserve Bank of
India helped reduce average inflation relative to earlier periods, but
households often continued to expect higher future inflation because food,
housing, education, healthcare, and transportation costs remained highly
visible in everyday life.
Inflation expectations matter because economic
behavior depends not only on current prices but also on beliefs about future
prices. If workers expect inflation to remain elevated, they seek higher wages.
If firms anticipate higher labor and input costs, they may raise prices in advance.
This interaction can create persistent inflationary pressures even when
productivity is improving. Earlier research on India also highlighted the
possibility of wage-price feedback effects, particularly in rural labor
markets.
The pandemic period further complicated wage
determination. Supply-chain disruptions, labor migration, changes in consumer
demand, and shifts toward digital services altered labor market dynamics. While
productivity recovered relatively quickly in many formal sectors, employment
recovery was uneven. Consequently, productivity gains did not automatically
produce proportional real wage increases across the workforce.
A broader historical precedent can be found in several
advanced economies where productivity growth outpaced median wage growth for
decades due to globalization, technological change, financialization, and
declining labor bargaining power. Similar patterns are increasingly discussed
in the Indian context, although India's labor market characteristics remain
distinct because of its large informal sector and demographic pressures.
The upward curve symbolizes how stronger productivity
can potentially generate accelerating gains in income, demand, and investment
if wage transmission remains effective. However, if wages lag behind
productivity, the cycle becomes weaker and aggregate demand may not keep pace
with productive capacity.
In conclusion, productivity and real wages are among
the most important determinants of economic demand because they connect the
supply side of production with the demand side of consumption. Since 2014,
India has achieved notable improvements in productivity through reforms, infrastructure
development, technological adoption, and macroeconomic stabilization.
Nevertheless, the translation of these gains into broad-based real wage growth
has been uneven due to labor market structure, informality, demographic
pressures, technological change, and inflation dynamics. Inflation expectations
have remained influential because households respond to the prices they
experience daily rather than solely to aggregate inflation statistics. For
India to sustain high growth over the long term, productivity improvements must
increasingly be accompanied by rising real incomes across a wider segment of
the population. Stronger wage growth linked to productivity, greater employment
generation, skill development, and continued inflation stability would reinforce
household purchasing power and strengthen the domestic demand foundation on
which durable economic expansion ultimately depends.