Aims: To trace and explain how India’s middle-class spending evolved from frugality-driven to convenience- and experience-oriented behaviour over 1970-2025, and to spell out the macro-economic implications of this shift for savings, credit and policy design. Study Design: A longitudinal, mixed-methods study that combines five-decade official micro-data with macro indicators and a systematic literature synthesis, organised around three phases: pre-liberalisation (1970-1990), gradual liberalisation (1991-2010) and the digital era (2011-2025). Place and Duration of Study: India; data span 1970 - July, 2025. Methodology: Multi-source data (NSSO expenditure surveys, RBI household‐finance series, World Bank development indicators, telecom-based digital-adoption metrics) are analysed with trend decomposition and decade-wise contrasts. Interpretation is anchored in established behavioural theory, linking attitude change to shifts in social norms and perceived control as incomes, technology and family structures evolved. Results: Real monthly per-capita expenditure rose more than seven-fold between 1999 and 2023; food’s budget share fell from 59. 4% to 46. 4% (rural) while discretionary categories doubled. Household net financial savings dropped from 11. 5% to 5. 1% of Gross Domestic Product and liabilities rose six-fold. Digital payments (75% of UPI users report higher spend) and easy credit (111 million cards; US 22 billion BNPL) lowered transaction frictions and reshaped purchasing psychology. Urbanisation reached 35. 3% and internet penetration 55. 3%, reinforcing lifestyle consumption. Implications: These trends promise sustained domestic-demand growth yet expose vulnerabilities—thinner household buffers, higher leverage and greater shock transmission—highlighting the need for targeted financial-literacy programmes and prudent consumer-credit oversight. Conclusion: Five decades of liberalisation, technology and social change have moved Indian middle-class consumption from survival-oriented thrift to aspiration-driven convenience. Harnessing the upside while containing the risks requires coordinated policy and industry responses.
Rahul Chowdary Paladugula (Mon,) studied this question.