“Making India $20 Trillion Economy” reframed growth as a system design challenge: strengthen financial inclusion, de-stress agriculture, and retool banking so capital reliably reaches the real economy. The summit brought policy thinkers and practitioners together around priority questions—what would it take to expand formal finance, modernise credit pipes, and align technology with outcomes rather than optics—treating inclusion and productivity as the twin flywheels of long-run growth.
Discussions pressed on execution over headlines: banking for a $20-trillion economy, prioritising the priority sector, and de-stressing agriculture were framed as operating problems—credit architecture, risk management, and institutional capacity—rather than mere program labels. Sessions and power panels underscored that technology must move beyond “band-aid” pilots to become embedded infrastructure that lowers costs, expands access, and compounds productivity across sectors.
Recognition segments reinforced the “outcomes over optics” ethic: awards highlighted concrete advances in financial inclusion and digital enablement, signalling that scalable, evidence-led practice—not aspiration alone—will carry India toward its multi-trillion trajectory. In spirit and substance, the summit argued that growth becomes durable when finance, agriculture, and technology are wired to deliver measurable gains on the ground.

















