Why India is going to be the Uncontested Global Leader of Orange Economy?
With PM Narendra Modi recently highlighting India’s remarkable growth in the orange economy during his address at the Visit Bharat Young Leaders Dialogue 2026 on January 12, 2026, it has become the latest buzzword. So, what is this Orange Economy, and does it really hold that much potential for India?
The Orange economy refers to that part of the economy that is driven by creativity, culture, and ideas. It includes all the activities where people use their imagination and creativity to produce goods and services that have value. This can include industries such as movies, music, art, fashion, design, advertising, publishing, and even video games. Unlike traditional sectors that focus on physical products like food or machinery, the orange economy is based on creative expression and intellectual property. It is important because it not only generates income and employment, especially for young people, but also helps preserve and promote cultural identity.
Named after the vibrant color orange to symbolize energy and originality, and popularized by Colombia and organizations like UNESCO, this sector contributes around 3% to global GDP and empowers entrepreneurs, especially young people, by adding culture to technology for inclusive development.
Over the last few decades, India’s Orange economy is growing by many folds including everyday areas like films and TV shows (Bollywood and OTT platforms), music and digital content creation (social media applications), gaming and animation (called AVGC), fashion and graphic design, live events such as concerts and theatre, advertising, handicrafts, publishing books, and software for creative tech. These sectors are growing fast thanks to cheap internet, smartphones, 5G, and young creators making videos, games, and art that now has a global audience. The Indian Government is boosting them with Budget 2026 plans like skill labs in schools for animation and gaming jobs, aiming to create millions of opportunities for youth in media, entertainment, and cultural exports.
Interestingly, it currently adds about 2-3% to the India’s GDP, roughly around 30 billion USD (Rs 2.5 lakh crore approx) from sectors like media and entertainment as of 2024 data available. It is already creating millions of jobs for youth, boosting exports through global hits in commercial films and OTT shows, and is growing fast at rates over 7% yearly.
India’s Orange economy has massive upcoming potential, projected to grow from around 30 $ billion today to 50 $ billion by 2029, that could create 10 million jobs. In the next decade, it will boom as a global export powerhouse for content, VFX, and cultural IP, AI personalization, low cost-technology, and government pushes. Young Indians, with over 650 million under 35, are accelerating this through the influencer economy where creators are earning billions via YouTube, Instagram reels, and short-form videos, growing as fast as at 18% CAR to 4 $ billion by 2026, and turning hobbies into careers. Youngsters are blending local culture with global trends, and are drawing ad money while building startups in emerging areas such as digital design and virtual reality.
The world can learn from India’s Orange economy by adopting its model of blending rich cultural heritage, like cinema storytelling, handicrafts, and festivals, with modern tech such as AI to empower young creators from small towns to go global. This was seen in events like WAVES 2025 that drew 90+ countries. For collaboration, global firms should partner with Indian talent via platforms like Create in India Challenge and WAVES Bazaar, co-producing content in AVGC, films, and digital media. They could invest in joint skill labs and IP hubs. They could also tap influencers for cross-border marketing, where India’s 650 million youth drive 4 $ billion in creator earnings by leveraging cheap data for viral reels and exports.
In this context, India provides three important lessons from its Orange Economy for the world.
First, it shows the value of developing skills early by teaching animation and design in schools, which helps nurture creativity at the grassroots level without relying on large factories. Second, simplifying copyright rules, as India has done, makes it easier to turn creative ideas into long-lasting products and also strengthens cultural influence, with Indian films reaching audiences in more than 100 countries. Third, encouraging digital inclusion through e-commerce and global platforms helps local artists and artisans connect directly with buyers around the world.
India and Indians have long had a natural inclination towards economic fluidity that centers on creativity. Crafts like pottery, weaving, and sculpture flourished in early civilizations like the Indus Valley Civilization, showing how creativity was tied to daily life. It is perhaps time; India globalizes its creative tendencies and takes the world with it as it thrives.
The Orange economy refers to that part of the economy that is driven by creativity, culture, and ideas. It includes all the activities where people use their imagination and creativity to produce goods and services that have value. This can include industries such as movies, music, art, fashion, design, advertising, publishing, and even video games. Unlike traditional sectors that focus on physical products like food or machinery, the orange economy is based on creative expression and intellectual property. It is important because it not only generates income and employment, especially for young people, but also helps preserve and promote cultural identity.
Named after the vibrant color orange to symbolize energy and originality, and popularized by Colombia and organizations like UNESCO, this sector contributes around 3% to global GDP and empowers entrepreneurs, especially young people, by adding culture to technology for inclusive development.
Over the last few decades, India’s Orange economy is growing by many folds including everyday areas like films and TV shows (Bollywood and OTT platforms), music and digital content creation (social media applications), gaming and animation (called AVGC), fashion and graphic design, live events such as concerts and theatre, advertising, handicrafts, publishing books, and software for creative tech. These sectors are growing fast thanks to cheap internet, smartphones, 5G, and young creators making videos, games, and art that now has a global audience. The Indian Government is boosting them with Budget 2026 plans like skill labs in schools for animation and gaming jobs, aiming to create millions of opportunities for youth in media, entertainment, and cultural exports.
Interestingly, it currently adds about 2-3% to the India’s GDP, roughly around 30 billion USD (Rs 2.5 lakh crore approx) from sectors like media and entertainment as of 2024 data available. It is already creating millions of jobs for youth, boosting exports through global hits in commercial films and OTT shows, and is growing fast at rates over 7% yearly.
India’s Orange economy has massive upcoming potential, projected to grow from around 30 $ billion today to 50 $ billion by 2029, that could create 10 million jobs. In the next decade, it will boom as a global export powerhouse for content, VFX, and cultural IP, AI personalization, low cost-technology, and government pushes. Young Indians, with over 650 million under 35, are accelerating this through the influencer economy where creators are earning billions via YouTube, Instagram reels, and short-form videos, growing as fast as at 18% CAR to 4 $ billion by 2026, and turning hobbies into careers. Youngsters are blending local culture with global trends, and are drawing ad money while building startups in emerging areas such as digital design and virtual reality.
The world can learn from India’s Orange economy by adopting its model of blending rich cultural heritage, like cinema storytelling, handicrafts, and festivals, with modern tech such as AI to empower young creators from small towns to go global. This was seen in events like WAVES 2025 that drew 90+ countries. For collaboration, global firms should partner with Indian talent via platforms like Create in India Challenge and WAVES Bazaar, co-producing content in AVGC, films, and digital media. They could invest in joint skill labs and IP hubs. They could also tap influencers for cross-border marketing, where India’s 650 million youth drive 4 $ billion in creator earnings by leveraging cheap data for viral reels and exports.
In this context, India provides three important lessons from its Orange Economy for the world.
First, it shows the value of developing skills early by teaching animation and design in schools, which helps nurture creativity at the grassroots level without relying on large factories. Second, simplifying copyright rules, as India has done, makes it easier to turn creative ideas into long-lasting products and also strengthens cultural influence, with Indian films reaching audiences in more than 100 countries. Third, encouraging digital inclusion through e-commerce and global platforms helps local artists and artisans connect directly with buyers around the world.
India and Indians have long had a natural inclination towards economic fluidity that centers on creativity. Crafts like pottery, weaving, and sculpture flourished in early civilizations like the Indus Valley Civilization, showing how creativity was tied to daily life. It is perhaps time; India globalizes its creative tendencies and takes the world with it as it thrives.
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