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GSDP is the sum of all value added by industries within each state or union territory and serves as a counterpart to the national gross domestic product (GDP). [1] As of 2011 [update] , the Government accounted for about 21% of the GDP followed by agriculture with 21% and corporate sector at 12%.
Tamil Nadu has the second largest economy of any state in India. [16] The state is also the most industrialised in the country. [17] [18] The state is 48.40% urbanised, accounting for around 9.26% of the urban population in the country, while the state as a whole accounted for 5.96% of India's total population in the 2011 census. [19]
This is a comparison between Indian states and countries by gross domestic product (PPP). Many of the states of India have large GDP (called gross state product ) which would rank highly on a list of countries by GDP.
The Chennai Port, one of the biggest in South Asia Chennai, formerly known as Madras, is the capital city of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. As of 2022 the Nominal GDP of the Chennai metropolitan area is ₹ 756,055 crore (US$96.18 billion) Chennai has an economic base anchored by the automobile, software services, medical tourism, hardware manufacturing and financial services sectors with ...
This is a list of Indian states and union territories by their per capita Net state domestic product (NSDP). NSDP is the state counterpart to a country's Net domestic product (NDP), which equals the gross domestic product (GDP) minus depreciation on capital goods. [1] [2]
Tamil Nadu's net state domestic product is the second largest economy in India. Tamil Nadu is the second largest state economy after Maharashtra with a gross state domestic product of ₹ 2,134,395 crore (equivalent to ₹ 25 trillion or US$290 billion in 2023). With GDP per capita of $3,000 it ranks fourth among Indian states.
Certain parts of South Asia are significantly wealthier than others; the four Indian states of Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Karnataka are projected to account for almost 50% of India's GDP by 2030, while the five South Indian states comprising 20% of India's population are expected to contribute 35% of India's GDP by 2030. [32]
The first list includes estimates compiled by the International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook, the second list shows the World Bank's data, and the third list includes data compiled by the United Nations Statistics Division. The IMF's definitive data for the past year and estimates for the current year are published twice a year in ...