T.N. govt. likely to release second edition of Economic Survey today


Tamil Nadu Economic Survey (Second Edition, 2026) — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Preparing Body Tamil Nadu State Planning Commission
Primary Input Source Finance Department, Government of Tamil Nadu
Edition in News Second edition (2026)
Release Date 16 February 2026 (one day before Interim Budget 2026-27)
Tamil Nadu GSDP Growth (2024-25) 11.2% (real); ~15.98% (nominal) per RBI
TN long-term avg real growth (2012-13 to 2023-24) 6.37% vs national 6.1%
National real growth (Union Economic Survey) 7.4% (for 2025-26)
TN GSDP at current prices (2023-24) ₹27.22 lakh crore
TN GSDP at current prices (2024-25) ₹31.18 lakh crore
TN Per Capita Income (2024-25) ₹3,61,619 (4th nationally)
TN Rank by economy size 2nd largest state economy in India
Sectoral share (2021-22 GSVA) Services 53% > Industry 33.9% > Agriculture 13.2%
Data Source for GSDP RBI Handbook of Statistics on Indian States
Special chapter mentioned Women's participation in the economy

[S1][S2][S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Tamil Nadu Economic Survey is prepared by the State Planning Commission, not the Finance Department directly. [S1]
  2. The second edition of Tamil Nadu's Economic Survey was released on 16 February 2026, one day before the Interim Budget 2026-27. [S1]
  3. Tamil Nadu's GSDP grew at 11.2% (real terms) in 2024-25 according to the RBI's Handbook of Statistics on Indian States. [S1]
  4. Tamil Nadu's long-term average real GSDP growth from 2012-13 to 2023-24 was 6.37%, compared to the national average of 6.1%. [S1]
  5. Tamil Nadu is the second-largest state economy in India by GSDP size.
  6. In 2024-25 nominal terms, Tamil Nadu's GSDP grew ~15.98% — highest among major states — ahead of Karnataka (12.77%) and Maharashtra (11.70%). [S2]
  7. Tamil Nadu's GSDP at current prices crossed ₹31 lakh crore in 2024-25 (from ₹26.88 lakh crore in 2023-24). [S2]
  8. Tamil Nadu's per capita income in 2024-25 was ₹3,61,619, placing it 4th nationally (behind Delhi, Telangana, Karnataka). [S2]
  9. The Services sector accounts for 53% of Tamil Nadu's GSVA (2021-22), making it the dominant contributor — followed by Industry (33.9%) and Agriculture (13.2%). [S3]
  10. The Union Economic Survey placed India's real growth at 7.4% for 2025-26; Tamil Nadu's figure is expected to be higher. [S1]
  11. The RBI Handbook of Statistics on Indian States is the authoritative source used by Tamil Nadu government for GSDP comparisons. [S1][S2]
  12. NITI Aayog estimated Tamil Nadu needs ₹923 lakh crore in investments to reach a GSDP of $26 trillion by 2047 (Viksit Bharat goal). [S3]
  13. Tamil Nadu's Interim Budget 2026-27 was presented on 17 February 2026 — the day after the Economic Survey release. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-III (Indian Economy — Growth, Development, Planning) Also touches GS-II (Federalism, Role of State Planning Bodies)

Syllabus Headings: - Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth and development. - Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; issues relating to development and management of social sector. - Government Budgeting.

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "State-level Economic Surveys are emerging as instruments of fiscal transparency and evidence-based governance. Critically analyse with reference to Tamil Nadu's experience." 2. "Tamil Nadu's economic trajectory consistently outpaces the national average. Examine the structural factors driving this performance and the policy lessons for other states." 3. "Discuss the constitutional and institutional framework governing state budgeting in India. How does the release of a pre-budget Economic Survey strengthen democratic accountability at the sub-national level?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Union Economic Survey The national-level template Tamil Nadu's survey is modelled on; understanding CEA's role and survey methodology is essential.
FRBM Act (Centre & States) Governs fiscal deficit targets; provides context for the Interim Budget.
RBI Handbook of Statistics on Indian States Primary data source cited in the survey; recurring Prelims source for GSDP, per capita income comparisons.
State Finance Commissions Parallel institution examining sub-national fiscal devolution; frequently confused with Planning Commissions.
NITI Aayog's Viksit Bharat 2047 Tamil Nadu's GSDP target of $26 trillion by 2047 is set in this national framework.
Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) vs GDP Definitional clarity critical; both nominal and real GSDP distinctions frequently tested.
Women's Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) Linked to the special chapter on women's participation flagged in the Survey.
Article 202 of the Constitution Governs Annual Financial Statement (budget) of states; legal foundation for the Interim Budget.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Preparing body confusion: The Tamil Nadu Economic Survey is prepared by the State Planning Commission (with Finance Department inputs) — NOT by the Finance Department alone, and NOT by NITI Aayog. [S1]
  2. Real vs Nominal GSDP growth conflation: The article cites 11.2% real growth for 2024-25; RBI nominal data shows ~15.98%. Examiners can test either figure — distinguish clearly.
  3. "Second edition" ≠ long-standing tradition: Tamil Nadu released its first Economic Survey only in 2025; the 2026 release is merely the second. Do not assume it is a decades-old practice.
  4. Tamil Nadu's economy rank: Tamil Nadu is the 2nd largest state economy — not 1st (Maharashtra holds that rank). Per capita income rank (4th) is separate from economy-size rank (2nd).
  5. Union vs State Economic Survey timing: The Union Economic Survey is released by the Finance Ministry / Chief Economic Adviser before the Union Budget; Tamil Nadu's is released by the State Planning Commission before the state budget. Different institutions, different levels of government.

11. Sources