India’s middle class, which comprises about a third of the total population, has witnessed improvements in financial security, especially in housing, healthcare, and digital access over the past twelve years of policy reforms.
Let us start with taxes imposed on the middle class. In 2014, you paid zero income tax if you earned up to ₹2.5 lakh a year. That number now stands at ₹12 lakh — and ₹12.75 lakh for salaried people after the standard deduction. For a family sitting in that bracket, this isn’t a minor adjustment. It’s the difference between financial anxiety and a small savings buffer.
GST (introduced in 2017) replaced a messy tangle of state and central taxes with one unified system. Rates on everyday goods came down. Shopping got marginally simpler and cheaper. Not dramatic, but real.
Now let’s get into home loans, which once cost borrowers between 9.5% and 10.5% annually, now sit closer to 7.5 to 8.75%. That gap, compounded over a 20-year mortgage, is significant money — money that stays with families rather than going to banks.
A roof over more heads
Housing was, for a long time, a source of deep middle-class anxiety. Stalled projects, delayed possessions, money locked in apartments that were never built.
Thanks to the PMAY-Urban scheme which has changed the scale of what was possible previously.
As per official figures over 98 lakh homes have been completed and delivered. A separate fund — SWAMIH — was created specifically to revive stuck residential projects. Over 58,000 homes across 146 stalled projects have been reportedly completed through it. Families who had been waiting years for possession finally got keys.
These aren’t statistics for most people. They’re the end of a very stressful chapter, something that gets unnoticed in the haze of negative stories.
Getting from A to B became easier
How about India’s metro network which now covers 26 cities, earlier it was 5 in 2014.
Daily ridership crossed 1.15 crore passengers. For working professionals in expanding cities, a reliable metro isn’t a luxury — it’s hours saved each week and money not spent on autos or cabs.
Air travel, once something most middle-class families did rarely, is becoming routine. The UDAN scheme connected smaller cities to the national network. Operational airports grew from 74 to 165. More destinations, more competition, more affordable fares.
Train travel got safer and more comfortable. Faster corridors, newer trains, upgraded stations.
Healthcare not heavy on savings
In Indian families health emergencies other than financial distress often bring along mental trauma. Over the years, medical bills of middle-class families have fallen back. Let us take the example of the Jan Aushadhi scheme, which is addressing one straightforward problem: medicine costs too much.
Over 18,000 outlets now sell quality generic medicines at 50–80% lower prices. Roughly 10–12 lakh people visit these stores daily. Over 11 years, the scheme is estimated to have saved families ₹40,000 crore in out-of-pocket medicine costs.
Ayushman Bharat expanded health coverage to tens of millions. Ayushman Arogya Mandirs — now over 1.85 lakh operational centres — pushed primary care closer to where people actually live. Out-of-pocket health spending fell from over 60% of total health expenditure to under 40%. That’s a meaningful shift.
Education opened up slightly
As per reports, more IITs, more AIIMS, more medical colleges. The numbers aren’t superficial.
But perhaps more quietly important is the Vidya Lakshmi scheme — education loans that are collateral-free and guarantor-free for students from families earning under ₹8 lakh, with a subsidised interest rate. Over 60,000 loans worth ₹7,750 crore were sanctioned in just one year.
Foreign universities opening campuses in India is another development worth watching. It won’t replace studying abroad for everyone, but it makes an internationally recognised degree accessible without the foreign exchange costs.
Daily life got less complicated
DigiLocker stores documents digitally. Digi Yatra lets you pass through airports without physical boarding passes. The UMANG app consolidates dozens of government services into one place. Aadhaar-linked authentication makes verification fast.
These are small things individually. Together, they reduce the friction of everyday life — fewer trips to government offices, less paperwork, faster processes.
What are we heading towards?
No policy package solves everything that is indeed true. Inequality persists and there are gaps that need to be filled. Jobs remain a pressure point. Healthcare and education quality are uneven across regions.
But the trajectory is clear. Financial relief through taxation, homes through focused housing schemes, mobility through infrastructure, healthcare access through generic medicines and insurance expansion, opportunity through education and startups — these efforts have, for many families, made the middle-class life more stable and more within reach.
The middle class was never just a beneficiary of growth. It was always its engine. The past 12 years suggest the government finally started treating it that way.
Courtesy: PIB Srinagar



