India’s Obesity Crisis: 440 Million Affected by 2050

March 10, 2025
3 mins read
Representative Image. Measuring Belly with Measuring Tape.
Representative Image. Measuring Belly with Measuring Tape. Photo Source: Bru-nO (Pixabay)

India faces a severe health challenge as obesity rates climb at an alarming pace. Recent studies published in The Lancet project that by 2050, approximately 440 million Indians could be overweight or obese—making India second only to China in global obesity rankings.

Growing Numbers Paint a Troubling Picture

Currently, India has about 180 million overweight or obese people (81 million men and 98 million women). But researchers from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021, including experts from the Indian Council of Medical Research, forecast this number will more than double over the next 25 years.

The breakdown reveals concerning trends across age groups:

  • Adults (25+): 440 million projected by 2050 (218 million men, 231 million women)
  • Children (5-14): 30 million projected (16 million boys, 14 million girls)
  • Adolescents (15-24): 39.7 million projected (22.7 million young men, 16.9 million young women)

By 2050, India is expected to have the world’s highest number of overweight and obese individuals in the 15-24 age group.

Globally, the picture is equally concerning. By 2050, an estimated 3.8 billion adults worldwide—over half the global adult population—could be overweight or obese.

What’s Driving the Epidemic?

The shift toward ultra-processed foods high in sugar, salt, and fat plays a major role in this health crisis. India has seen one of the largest annual increases in ultra-processed food sales per capita between 2009 and 2019, alongside Cameroon and Vietnam.

Emmanuela Gakidou, lead author from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, describes this trend as “a profound tragedy and a monumental societal failure.”

Food industry strategies are partly to blame. The studies note that multinational food corporations have shifted focus from high-income countries to expanding markets in lower and middle-income nations like India, where “population growth, improvement in per-capita income, and weaker regulations have created favorable markets.”


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Health and Economic Consequences

The obesity epidemic brings several serious health consequences:

  • Increased risk of Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and certain cancers
  • Early onset of lifestyle diseases in children and adolescents
  • Higher vulnerability to infections
  • Increased healthcare costs and reduced productivity

A particularly complex pattern emerges in India, where childhood undernutrition can trigger adaptive mechanisms that promote fat storage later in life—creating a “dual burden” of malnutrition.

Beyond BMI: Rethinking How We Measure Obesity

Experts are calling for changes in how obesity is diagnosed. In January, authors of a Lancet Commission report urged moving beyond just BMI (Body Mass Index) to include measurements like waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio.

The commission proposed two new categories:

  • Clinical obesity“: A chronic condition with obesity-related organ dysfunction
  • “Pre-clinical obesity”: Increased health risk without current illness

This approach addresses concerns that “BMI is not an honest measure of health or disease and can thus result in a wrong diagnosis.”

Solutions and Action Steps

The studies outline several key strategies:

  1. Protect local food systems from being overtaken by large food companies
  2. Invest in clinical management and treatment of obesity
  3. Develop national policies and action plans (currently only 40% of countries have such policies, dropping to 10% in low and middle-income nations)
  4. Study intervention strategies specifically for low-income settings
  5. Improve access to the new generation of anti-obesity medications
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi has recognized the problem, stating in his February 23rd “Mann Ki Baat” radio address that “obesity will have to be dealt with to be a fit and healthy nation.”

The growing obesity epidemic represents one of India’s most pressing public health challenges—requiring coordinated action from government, healthcare systems, and communities.

FAQs

How many Indians are expected to be overweight or obese by 2050? According to The Lancet study, approximately 440 million Indians could be overweight or obese by 2050, making India the country with the second-highest obesity rates globally after China.
Which age groups in India are most affected by obesity? All age groups show concerning trends, but India is projected to have the world’s highest number of overweight and obese people aged 15-24 by 2050, with over 22.7 million young men and 16.9 million young women affected.
What is causing the rise in obesity in India? Major factors include increased consumption of ultra-processed foods high in sugar, salt, and fat; multinational food companies targeting expanding markets in India; urbanization leading to more sedentary lifestyles; and weak regulatory frameworks. India saw one of the largest annual increases in ultra-processed food sales between 2009-2019.
Why is BMI alone no longer considered sufficient for diagnosing obesity? Experts now recognize that BMI doesn’t account for important factors like fat distribution. The Lancet Commission has proposed including measurements like waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio, and has suggested new categories of “clinical obesity” and “pre-clinical obesity” that consider actual health impacts rather than just body size.
What are the health risks associated with the obesity epidemic? Obesity increases risks for Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, certain cancers, and weakened bone health. In children and adolescents, it can lead to early onset of lifestyle diseases. The epidemic also increases vulnerability to infections and places significant economic burdens on healthcare systems.
What solutions have been proposed to address India’s obesity crisis? Proposed solutions include protecting local food systems from multinational companies; developing national obesity prevention policies; investing in clinical management; studying intervention strategies specific to low-income settings; improving access to anti-obesity medications; and promoting healthier traditional diets and active lifestyles.

Tejal Somvanshi

Meet Tejal Somvanshi, a soulful wanderer and a staunch wellness advocate, who elegantly navigates through the enchanting domains of Fashion and Beauty with a natural panache. Her journey, vividly painted with hues from a vibrant past in the media production world, empowers her to carve out stories that slice through the cacophony, where brands morph into characters and marketing gimmicks evolve into intriguing plot twists. To Tejal, travel is not merely an activity; it unfolds as a chapter brimming with adventures and serendipitous tales, while health is not just a regimen but a steadfast companion in her everyday epic. In the realms of fashion and beauty, she discovers her muse, weaving a narrative where each style narrates a story, and every beauty trend sparks a dialogue. Tejal seamlessly melds the spontaneous spirit of the media industry with the eloquent prose of a storyteller, crafting tales as vibrant and dynamic as the industry she thrives in.

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