The Columbia Indian Economy Summit 2026 will convene on April 11 to discuss India’s path toward achieving high-income status by 2047, focusing on economic reforms and technological advancements.
As India approaches the centenary of its independence, the roadmap for its transformation into a high-income powerhouse will take center stage at Columbia University next month.
The Raj Center on Indian Economic Policies is set to host the Columbia Indian Economy Summit 2026, a high-level gathering dedicated to the “Quest for a Developed India.” The daylong event, scheduled for April 11 at the School of International and Public Affairs, arrives at a critical juncture for the world’s most populous nation.
With a goal to achieve developed status by 2047, the summit seeks to peel back the layers of complex economic reforms, shifting state-level dynamics, and the rapid technological transformations currently reshaping the subcontinent.
The agenda kicks off with a keynote address featuring Indermit Gill of the World Bank Group and Columbia’s own Arvind Panagariya. Their discussion will tackle a pivotal question: Can India reach high-income status before its 100th anniversary of independence? This query carries weight not just for the billion-plus people living in India, but for a global economy increasingly reliant on Indian growth.
Beyond the dry statistics of GDP and fiscal policy, the summit aims to humanize the economic struggle. By bringing together leading scholars and industry experts, the panels will explore how state governments navigate local challenges while contributing to national ambitions. The conversation will also delve into how technology serves as an equalizer, potentially accelerating a journey that took other nations decades longer to complete.
The setting itself, on the 15th floor of the International Affairs Building overlooking Manhattan, provides a global backdrop for a discussion that is inherently international. As global supply chains shift and geopolitical alliances evolve, India’s internal economic health has become a barometer for regional stability and global market trends.
Organizers have emphasized that the event requires strict advanced registration due to heightened security measures. For attendees—a mix of students, policy experts, and corporate leaders—the summit offers more than just lectures; it provides a networking hub to foster the collaborations needed to fuel India’s “Viksit Bharat” (Developed India) vision.
As the 2047 deadline looms, the Columbia summit serves as an intellectual laboratory, testing the theories and policies that will determine if India’s economic ascent is a historical certainty or a goal that requires a radical rethinking of its current trajectory. For one Saturday in New York, the future of the Indian economy will be the primary focus of the world’s leading academic minds, according to The American Bazaar.

