Indian BOP Market Stands at $1.2 Trillion

Submitted by Rob Katz on April 28, 2007 - 10:50.
April 26, 2007 - 10:00, Economic Times of India
Bottom of the pyramid market stands at $1.2 trillion

The base of the economic pyramid (BOP) in India representing the masses is an over $1.2-trillion market, making up the biggest chunk of the global $5-trillion BOP market excluding China, says a study by IFC and World Resources Institute (WRI).

The term ‘bottom of the pyramid’ was coined by management guru CK Prahalad to describe the poor and the underserved section of the market. The BOP market in India, about $1.205 trillion, in purchasing power parity terms, makes up 84.8% of the total $1.42-trillion national household market.

The BOP population of 924.1 million people — 78% of them in rural areas— makes up about 95% of the country’s population. The IFC-WRI study that used data from national household surveys in 110 countries, the BOP was defined as all those with incomes below $3,000 in local purchasing power. China was not part of the study.

“CK (Prahalad) coined the term and he backed it by interesting stories about the market. This study provides statistics and analysis of how big the BOP market is and what is its buying power,” said WRI vice-president (innovation) Allen Hammond.

In India, BOP accounts for 88.1% of the total national household expenditure on food, 87.2% of energy expenditure, 85.3% of health spend, 78.8% of household goods expenditure and 52.6% of the country’s spend on information and communication technology.

Of the global BOP market, Asia makes up the biggest chunk with a $3.47 trillion market, followed by Latin America ($509 billion), Eastern Europe ($458 billion) and Africa ($429-billion).

Sector-wise, food is the biggest BOP market ($2.8-trillion), followed by energy ($433 billion), housing ($332-billion), transportation ($179 billion), health ($158-billion), ICT ($51-billion) and water ($20 billion). Compared to the BOP, the mid-market segment- those with incomes between $3,000 and $20,000- represents a $12.5 trillion market globally.
Submitted by SM on April 28, 2008 - 01:00.
BOP may constitute a *significant %* of India's population, but to release a report that says over 95% of India's pop is BOP is pretty ridiculous-that too in 2007?! Pls refer to NCAER's research (or any other research firm for that matter) on the indian consumer demographics and you will see that the market is based on different segments wherein the middle classes are increasing very quickly and definitely constitutes anywhere b/w 50-350 million people depending on how you measure of course. I'm not sure how this ridiculous % was reached!
Submitted by Rob Katz on April 28, 2008 - 09:22.
SM - thank you for your comment and for taking a look at "The Next 4 Billion" report. I'll refer you to the methodology section of the report for a full explanation of the way we came to the size of each market. You have a valid point that the Indian demographics may show something slightly different. The key here is that we were attempting to create a universal standard that could be applied across countries. Nothing is perfect, and we are certainly open to new research and - even more - better data.

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