# Sri Lanka Just Overtook India In The World Bank's Income Rankings, Here's Why

> Sri Lanka has returned to the World Bank's upper middle income category in its 2026 report, ranking above India even though India's economy is far larger, because the classification is based on income per person, not total GDP.

**Type:** article · **Category:** Investigations · **Published:** 2026-07-07 · **Source:** TrendKia
**Canonical:** https://trendkia.com/en/investigations/india-ki-gdp-bari-phira-bhi-world-bank-ki-rainkinga-men-sri-lanka-nikala-age-janen-vajaha-5362 · **Language:** English
**Tags:** World Bank, Sri Lanka economy, India GDP, upper middle income, GNI per capita, IMF debt

Sri Lanka is officially wealthier than India again, at least going by the World Bank's yardstick, and that is a remarkable turnaround for a country that was in economic freefall just a few years ago. Sky high prices, shortages of essential goods and a crushing loan crisis had triggered mass protests that forced the country's president to flee. Now, the island nation is back in the World Bank's 2026 upper middle income category, ranking above India by income classification, even though India's overall economy is many times larger. So how exactly did Sri Lanka manage this comeback, and why does a country with a much smaller economy get to sit in a higher income bracket than India?

## What An Upper Middle Income Economy Actually Means
An upper middle income economy is a country that is just one step away from becoming a high income economy. To qualify for this tag, a country's average annual income per person has to fall between ₹4,42,460 and ₹13,71,550, according to the World Bank's FY2027 classification. This is measured using what is called Gross National Income, or GNI, per person. The math behind it is simple. If a country earns a total of ₹10 lakh in a year and has 10 people, each person would average ₹1 lakh a year, and that ₹1 lakh becomes the country's GNI per person. Crucially, the World Bank uses this average figure to sort countries into income groups, not what any individual actually earns.

## Why This World Bank Tag Is More Than Just A Label
Economist Nilanjan Ghosh, Vice President at the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) in Kolkata, compares it to a school report card. It doesn't just tell you how well you are doing, it can also decide whether you qualify for a scholarship. In the same way, a country's income category can influence the kind of financial support it gets from other countries and global institutions. The World Bank's income groups help decide which nations qualify for cheaper loans, grants and development aid, and they give governments and economists a common yardstick to compare economies and track progress over time. Pakistan is a good example of what happens when a country stays stuck at the bottom. Like India, it is classified as a lower middle income economy, but repeated economic crises have forced it to lean heavily on the International Monetary Fund. It currently owes the IMF $8.96 billion, and only Argentina, at $56.83 billion, Ukraine, at $14.13 billion, and Egypt, at $9.38 billion, owe the IMF more. India, in contrast, hasn't taken a single IMF loan since the Balance of Payments crisis of 1991.

## How Sri Lanka Clawed Its Way Back
Sri Lanka is back in the upper middle income bracket, but staying there is going to be the real challenge, because the country is sitting right on the borderline of the category. According to the World Bank's 2026 report, Sri Lanka returned to the upper middle income group after its economy grew 5% in 2025, which pushed its average income per person above the World Bank's threshold. Vietnam and the Philippines have also moved up to upper middle income status around the same time. Sri Lanka had actually entered this category back in 2019, but dropped out again after the Easter Sunday attacks, the Covid-19 pandemic and the 2022 debt crisis combined to trigger its worst economic collapse in decades. Ghosh says Sri Lanka's services sector, its tourism industry, remittances sent home by workers abroad, and its relatively smaller population have all helped lift its GNI per capita back up. But he is quick to add a note of caution, saying the World Bank's classification only reflects average income levels, and does not mean the country has fully recovered from its recent debt crisis or its broader economic troubles. Even the World Bank itself calls this a story of recovery, while pointing out that Sri Lanka crossed the income threshold by only a narrow margin.

## Why India Is Still Stuck In The Lower Middle Income Bracket
India has remained in the lower middle income category since 2007, even though its income per person has steadily increased over the years. The catch is that the threshold needed to move into the next category has also kept rising, and India's population growth means that whatever income gains the economy makes end up spread across a much larger number of people. Think of it like two families. One family earns ₹10 lakh a year and has 10 members, which works out to ₹1 lakh per person. Another family earns ₹8 lakh but has only 4 members, working out to ₹2 lakh per person. Even though the first family earns more in total, the second family is actually better off on an average, per person basis. This is exactly India's problem. Its economy is among the largest and fastest growing in the world, but the World Bank does not rank countries by the size of their economy, it looks strictly at income per person. Because India's income has to be shared among 1.4 billion people, its GNI per person still works out to only around $2,500 to $2,700, which keeps it firmly in the lower middle income category.

## What Would It Actually Take For India To Become A High Income Economy
Getting there is not going to happen through growth alone. It helps to think of this like upgrading from a bicycle to a car. Pedalling harder certainly helps you go faster, but if you want to travel much farther, you eventually need a better vehicle altogether. For India, that better vehicle means stronger reforms, not just a faster pace of growth. According to the World Bank, India needs to grow at an average of about 7.8% a year to move from a lower middle income economy to a high income economy by 2047. But hitting that number will also require deep structural reforms if India wants to avoid what is known as the middle income trap. In its India Country Economic Memorandum 2024, the World Bank says India must create more productive jobs, attract more investment, increase women's participation in the workforce, and invest more in education and skills. One of the biggest challenges here is that over 45% of Indians still work in agriculture, a sector where productivity remains relatively low. The report argues that more of these workers need to move into manufacturing and high value services, where incomes tend to be considerably higher. Ghosh sums it up by saying India needs sustained growth accompanied by faster job creation, greater labour productivity, human capital formation, urbanisation and structural transformation if it wants to cross the upper middle income threshold. As he points out, the distinction matters a great deal, because becoming a large economy is simply not the same thing as becoming a high per capita income economy.

## What this means for you
- **For Indian readers:** Until India's income per person actually rises, the country won't get the full benefit of cheaper loans, grants or a higher global economic standing, no matter how large its total economy grows, which is why reforms that boost jobs, investment and average earnings matter more than headline GDP size.

## Questions & Answers

### 1. What income category is Sri Lanka in now?
According to the World Bank's 2026 report, Sri Lanka has returned to the upper middle income category.

### 2. What income category is India in and why?
India has stayed in the lower middle income category since 2007 because its GNI per person is still only around $2,500 to $2,700, below the upper middle income threshold.

### 3. How much income per person is needed for upper middle income status?
Under the World Bank's FY2027 classification, average annual income per person must fall between ₹4,42,460 and ₹13,71,550.

### 4. Why did Sri Lanka drop out of the upper middle income category before?
The Easter Sunday attacks, the Covid-19 pandemic and the 2022 debt crisis together triggered Sri Lanka's worst economic collapse in decades, pushing it out of the category.

### 5. How does Pakistan compare to India on this measure?
Pakistan is also a lower middle income economy like India, but it currently owes the IMF $8.96 billion.

### 6. How fast does India need to grow to become a high income economy?
The World Bank says India needs to grow at an average of about 7.8% a year to become a high income economy by 2047.

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