Tata Motors바카라™ comeback can be attributed to the Tiago model, a five-seater hatchback costing between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 8 lakh. The other car that helped the carmaker change its narrative is Nexon, a sub-4-metre SUV in the Rs 7 to 11 lakh range. But Gaurav Vangaal, associate director at IHS Markit, holds a different view and points to the demand-side problem in the Indian economy. 바카라śBetween 2011 and 2019, the light vehicle market grew at a CAGR of just 2%. At this level of market growth, it바카라™s not possible to sustain for most companies. It was the same story earlier for GM and now for Ford. Most people are just replacing their old cars and first-time buyers are gradually reducing in the market,바카라ť he argues. Vangaal바카라™s argument makes sense when we analyse the per capita GDP growth of India over the past 10 years. According to World Bank data, in the decade spanning 2011-2020, India바카라™s per capita GDP, at current prices in US dollars, grew at a CAGR of just 4.3%. For an economy that was projected to reap the benefits of the demographic dividend바카라”12 million people enter the working-age population of 15-59 every year바카라”this growth was discouraging. Sanjeev Sanyal, the government바카라™s principal economic advisor, does not buy the demand argument at all. 바카라śThere are certain issues related to chip manufacturing that the current auto sector is facing. This is a global problem and has nothing to do with India. And it has nothing to do with demand. There바카라™s a demand for cars. As soon as the chip supply comes back, worldwide car manufacturing will revive,바카라ť he says.