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Chief Economic Advisors of India – Complete List

Complete chief economic advisors of India list with tenure, key contributions & facts. Updated 2026. Essential for UPSC, SSC, Banking & competitive exams. Revise now.

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📅 April 2026
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The Chief Economic Advisors of India (CEA) are the government’s top economic minds — responsible for producing the Economic Survey, advising on macroeconomic policy, and guiding the Finance Ministry on fiscal strategy.

The CEA list is tested in UPSC Prelims, Banking, RBI Grade B, NABARD, SEBI, and SSC CGL exams — particularly in current affairs and economy sections. This page gives you a complete, updated list of all Chief Economic Advisors of India with their tenures, institutional backgrounds, landmark contributions, and exam-critical facts for quick, confident revision.

25 Total CEAs (1950–2026)
~8 yrs Longest Tenure (Shankar Acharya)
Budget Eve Economic Survey Release Date
Jan 2022 Current CEA Appointed

⚡ Quick Facts

Must-Know Facts for Exams
  • The Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) is the head of the Economic Division in the Ministry of Finance and the principal adviser on economic matters.
  • The CEA is responsible for producing India’s annual Economic Survey, released one day before the Union Budget every year.
  • V. Krishnamurthy was among the first to formally hold the title of Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India.
  • Arvind Subramanian (2014–2018) is widely regarded as one of the most influential and reform-oriented CEAs — associated with the JAM Trinity concept.
  • V. Anantha Nageswaran is the current Chief Economic Advisor (since January 2022), with a focus on capex-led growth and structural resilience.
⚠️ Common Exam Trap

Raghuram Rajan served as both CEA (2012–13) and RBI Governor (2013–16) — going directly from one role to the other. He is the only person to have served consecutively as both CEA and RBI Governor (other CEAs who later became RBI Governors had long gaps between the two roles). Also: the Economic Survey is prepared by the CEA / Ministry of Finance — NOT by NITI Aayog, the Planning Commission, or the RBI. Another trap: Kaushik Basu (CEA 2009–12) later became World Bank Chief Economist — not RBI Governor.

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📋 Chief Economic Advisors of India — Complete List

🔍
# ↕ Chief Economic Advisor ↕ Tenure Institution / Background Notable Contribution / Key Exam Fact
1 K.N. Raj 1950–1951 Delhi School of Economics Among India’s first economic advisors; foundational macroeconomic advisory role
2 B.K. Madan 1956–1957 RBI / Finance Ministry Early post-Independence economic policy advisory
3 I.G. Patel 1961–1967 IAS / Finance Ministry Later became RBI Governor (1977–1982); one of India’s finest economic administrators
4 S. Boothalingam 1964–1965 IAS Finance Ministry senior official; economic planning advisory
5 M. Narasimham 1970–1973 IAS / RBI Later RBI Governor (1977); chaired landmark Narasimham Committee on banking reform
6 A. Bagchi 1973–1974 Finance Ministry Economic advisory during early Indira Gandhi era
7 Manmohan Singh 1972–1976 IAS / Finance Ministry Only CEA to become RBI Governor (1982–85), Finance Minister (1991) AND Prime Minister (2004–14) — unique triple distinction
8 S. Raj 1977–1978 Finance Ministry Economic advisory during Janata Party government
9 V. Krishnamurthy 1978–1981 IAS Among the first to formally hold the CEA title; later chaired several public sector reform bodies
10 M. Narasimham (2nd stint) 1981–1982 IAS / RBI Second stint; later RBI Governor; Narasimham Committee legacy
11 Arjun Sengupta 1981–1985 Economist / International Former Executive Director at IMF; also UN Special Rapporteur on Right to Development
12 S. Venkitaramanan 1985–1988 IAS / Finance Ministry Later RBI Governor (1990–1992); managed 1991 BoP crisis and gold pledge as Governor
13 Bimal Jalan 1988–1989 IAS / Finance Ministry Later RBI Governor (1997–2003); chaired Bimal Jalan Committee on RBI reserves (2018)
14 Rakesh Mohan 1989–1991 Economist / Finance Ministry Later Deputy Governor of RBI; authored important infrastructure and urban finance reports
15 Deepak Nayyar 1989–1991 Academic Economist (JNU) Advised during pre-liberalisation and liberalisation transition period
16 Ashok Desai 1991–1993 Economist Advised during the critical early liberalisation period under Finance Minister Manmohan Singh
17 Shankar Acharya 1993–2001 IAS / Finance Ministry Longest-serving CEA in modern era (~8 years); guided India through 1997 Asian Financial Crisis
18 Parthasarathi Shome 1995–1996 IMF / Tax Expert Tax reform expert; later chaired Shome Committee on GAAR and retrospective taxation
19 Ashok Lahiri 2002–2004 Finance Ministry Economic Survey during Vajpayee government’s final year; India Shining campaign context
20 Arvind Virmani 2007–2009 Planning Commission / IMF Economic Survey during global financial crisis; later India’s IMF representative
21 Kaushik Basu 2009–2012 Cornell University / World Bank Later World Bank Chief Economist (2012–2016); Game Theory expert; “Visible Hand” policy concept
22 Raghuram Rajan 2012–2013 IMF / University of Chicago Only CEA to become RBI Governor consecutively (2013–2016); former IMF Chief Economist; other CEAs (I.G. Patel, Narasimham, Venkitaramanan, Bimal Jalan) also became RBI Governors but after long gaps
23 Arvind Subramanian 2014–2018 IMF / Peterson Institute Introduced JAM Trinity concept; Universal Basic Income debate; GDP overestimation paper (2019)
24 Krishnamurthy Subramanian 2018–2021 ISB Hyderabad Academic economist; focused on wealth creation, economic growth, and banking sector health
25 V. Anantha Nageswaran Jan 2022 – present Credit Suisse / Academic Current CEA; Economic Surveys on capex-led growth; “Vishwamitra economy” framing; structural resilience focus
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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips

Note 1 — Role of the CEA and the Economic Survey

The CEA is appointed by the Government of India and reports to the Finance Minister. The CEA leads the Economic Division of the Ministry of Finance and is the primary author of the annual Economic Survey of India — the most important pre-Budget document, released one day before the Union Budget (Budget Eve). It provides a comprehensive review of the Indian economy, key data, and policy recommendations for the coming year.

Note 2 — Raghuram Rajan’s Unique Dual Distinction

Raghuram Rajan is the only person in Indian economic history to have served as Chief Economic Advisor (2012–2013) and RBI Governor (2013–2016) in consecutive appointments — going directly from one role to the next. While several earlier CEAs (I.G. Patel, M. Narasimham, S. Venkitaramanan, Bimal Jalan) also later became RBI Governors, all of them had long gaps between the two roles. Rajan is also the only former IMF Chief Economist to serve as India’s CEA and then RBI Governor. This consecutive distinction is a high-frequency exam question.

Note 3 — Arvind Subramanian’s Key Contributions (2014–2018)

Widely considered the most influential CEA of the modern era. His landmark contributions include: (a) popularising the JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan Yojana + Aadhaar + Mobile) as a reform framework, (b) analysing Universal Basic Income (UBI) in Economic Survey 2016–17, (c) writing nuanced analyses of demonetisation and GST impacts, and (d) his controversial 2019 research paper arguing India’s GDP growth was overestimated by 2.5 percentage points. Note: Manmohan Singh also served as CEA (1972–76) before becoming RBI Governor (1982–85), Finance Minister (1991), and PM (2004–14) — making him the only CEA to achieve all three roles.

Note 4 — Shankar Acharya and Kaushik Basu

Shankar Acharya (CEA 1993–2001) had the longest tenure in the modern era — approximately 8 years. He guided India through the aftermath of the 1991 liberalisation, the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, and into the early 2000s growth period. Kaushik Basu (CEA 2009–2012) later became Chief Economist of the World Bank (2012–2016) — a frequently tested career fact.

Note 5 — Current CEA: V. Anantha Nageswaran

V. Anantha Nageswaran was appointed in January 2022, succeeding Krishnamurthy Subramanian (2018–2021). He has produced several notable Economic Surveys — including the 2022–23 Survey comparing India to “Arjuna” focused on long-term goals, and subsequent surveys emphasising private capex revival and structural resilience. His background spans Credit Suisse and various research institutions — combining market practice with academic rigour.

🧠 Mnemonic — Recent CEAs in Reverse Order

“Nageswaran K-Sub Arvind-Sub Rajan Basu Virmani”

N = V. Anantha Nageswaran (2022–present) | K = Krishnamurthy Subramanian (2018–21) | A = Arvind Subramanian (2014–18) | R = Raghuram Rajan (2012–13) | B = Kaushik Basu (2009–12) | V = Arvind Virmani (2007–09)

Arvind Subramanian’s 4 Contributions — “JAM UBI Demonetisation GDP”
J = JAM Trinity | U = Universal Basic Income debate | D = Demonetisation analysis | G = GDP overestimation paper (2019)

🃏 Flashcards

Flashcards — Chief Economic Advisors of India

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Question
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Answer
Card 1 of 5

🧩 Practice Quiz

Chief Economic Advisors — MCQ Quiz

5 questions · Answer all · Check your score

Question 1 of 5
Who is the current Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) of India as of 2026?
A. Krishnamurthy Subramanian
B. Arvind Subramanian
C. Raghuram Rajan
D. V. Anantha Nageswaran
✓ Explanation

V. Anantha Nageswaran is the current Chief Economic Advisor of India, appointed in January 2022. He succeeded Krishnamurthy Subramanian (2018–2021). Nageswaran has a background in economics, finance, and academia, having worked with Credit Suisse and various research institutions before his appointment.

Question 2 of 5
Which Chief Economic Advisor of India later became the Governor of the Reserve Bank of India?
A. Kaushik Basu
B. Arvind Subramanian
C. Raghuram Rajan
D. Shankar Acharya
✓ Explanation

Raghuram Rajan served as Chief Economic Advisor of India from 2012 to 2013 and then became the 23rd Governor of the Reserve Bank of India from 2013 to 2016 — going directly from one role to the other in consecutive appointments. While several earlier CEAs (I.G. Patel, M. Narasimham, S. Venkitaramanan, Bimal Jalan) also eventually became RBI Governors, Rajan is the only one who did so in back-to-back appointments. He is also the only person to have been IMF Chief Economist, then India’s CEA, then RBI Governor.

Question 3 of 5
The annual Economic Survey of India is prepared by which body and released when?
A. NITI Aayog — on Budget Day
B. Ministry of Finance (CEA’s office) — one day before the Union Budget
C. Planning Commission — one month before the Budget
D. RBI — two days before the Union Budget
✓ Explanation

The Economic Survey of India is prepared by the Economic Division of the Ministry of Finance, under the leadership of the Chief Economic Advisor (CEA). It is released one day before the Union Budget (on Budget Eve) and provides a comprehensive analysis of the Indian economy, key macroeconomic indicators, and policy recommendations for the coming year.

Question 4 of 5
The concept of JAM Trinity in India’s economic policy is associated with which Chief Economic Advisor?
A. Kaushik Basu
B. Krishnamurthy Subramanian
C. Shankar Acharya
D. Arvind Subramanian
✓ Explanation

The JAM Trinity concept — Jan Dhan Yojana (financial inclusion) + Aadhaar (digital identity) + Mobile connectivity as a reform framework for targeted subsidy delivery — was popularised and analytically developed by Arvind Subramanian during his tenure as CEA (2014–2018). It became a cornerstone of India’s Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) policy.

Question 5 of 5
Which CEA had the longest tenure in the modern era and approximately how long did he serve?
A. Arvind Subramanian — 4 years
B. Shankar Acharya — approximately 8 years
C. Kaushik Basu — 3 years
D. Krishnamurthy Subramanian — 3 years
✓ Explanation

Shankar Acharya served as Chief Economic Advisor from 1993 to 2001 — a tenure of approximately 8 years, the longest of any CEA in modern India. He guided India through the post-liberalisation economic transformation, the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, and the early 2000s growth acceleration period under Finance Ministers Manmohan Singh, Chidambaram, and Yashwant Sinha.

✅ Key Takeaways

Remember These for Your Exam
1
The CEA leads the Economic Division of the Ministry of Finance and prepares the Economic Survey, released one day before the Union Budget every year. The CEA reports to the Finance Minister — not to NITI Aayog or the RBI.
2
Raghuram Rajan (2012–13) is the only person to serve as CEA and RBI Governor consecutively — going directly from one role to the other. He is also the only former IMF Chief Economist to hold both offices. Note: I.G. Patel, Narasimham, Venkitaramanan, and Bimal Jalan also served as both CEA and RBI Governor, but with significant gaps between the two roles.
3
Arvind Subramanian (2014–18) is the most exam-relevant CEA of the NDA era — known for the JAM Trinity, Universal Basic Income debate, and his 2019 paper on India’s GDP overestimation.
4
Shankar Acharya (1993–2001) had the longest CEA tenure (~8 years). Kaushik Basu (2009–12) later became World Bank Chief Economist — a commonly tested career trajectory question.
5
Several CEAs later became RBI Governors: I.G. Patel (CEA 1961–67 → RBI Governor 1977–82), M. Narasimham (CEA 1970–73 → RBI Governor 1977), S. Venkitaramanan (CEA 1985–88 → RBI Governor 1990–92), and Bimal Jalan (CEA 1988–89 → RBI Governor 1997–2003).
6
V. Anantha Nageswaran is the current CEA (since January 2022). He succeeded Krishnamurthy Subramanian (2018–2021) and is the 25th person to hold the office in the post-Independence era.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs — Chief Economic Advisors of India
Who is the current Chief Economic Advisor of India in 2026?

V. Anantha Nageswaran is the current Chief Economic Advisor of India, appointed in January 2022. He succeeded Krishnamurthy Subramanian, who served from 2018 to 2021. Nageswaran brings an interdisciplinary background combining academic economics, financial market research (Credit Suisse), and public policy. He has produced several noteworthy Economic Surveys, including analyses of India’s post-COVID recovery, the role of private capital expenditure, and India’s position in the global economy. He is the 25th person to hold this office in the post-Independence era.

What is the role of the Chief Economic Advisor in India?

The Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) is the principal economic adviser to the Government of India — specifically to the Finance Ministry. The CEA leads the Economic Division of the Ministry of Finance with key responsibilities including: preparing and presenting the annual Economic Survey (released the day before the Union Budget), advising the Finance Minister on macroeconomic policy, fiscal strategy, and structural reforms, representing India at international economic forums, and providing analytical inputs on economic legislation. The CEA reports directly to the Finance Minister and works closely with the Finance Secretary and the Secretary of Economic Affairs.

What is the Economic Survey of India and why is it important?

The Economic Survey of India is the flagship annual document of the Ministry of Finance, prepared under the CEA’s leadership. It is released one day before the Union Budget every year and provides a comprehensive review of the Indian economy — covering GDP growth, inflation, fiscal position, trade, employment, agriculture, and structural reforms. Since Arvind Subramanian’s tenure (2014–2018), the Survey has become particularly notable for its analytical innovation — introducing the JAM Trinity concept, the Universal Basic Income debate, and economic philosophy references. It is directly tested in UPSC, Banking, and Finance exams.

Why is the Chief Economic Advisors list important for competitive exams?

The CEA list is tested in UPSC Prelims (Economy and Current Affairs), Banking Awareness (IBPS, SBI, RBI Grade B), NABARD, SEBI, and SSC CGL exams. Key tested facts include the current CEA (V. Anantha Nageswaran, 2022–present), Raghuram Rajan’s dual CEA and RBI Governor distinction, Arvind Subramanian’s JAM Trinity and GDP debate contributions, the Economic Survey’s release timing (Budget Eve) and preparation authority (CEA / Finance Ministry), Kaushik Basu’s World Bank Chief Economist role, and Shankar Acharya’s record tenure. CEA questions often appear alongside Finance Minister, Finance Secretary, and RBI Governor questions — making the whole Finance Ministry leadership cluster an important revision set.

Relevant For
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains GS-III RBI Grade B IBPS PO / Clerk SBI PO / Clerk NABARD SEBI SSC CGL
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