In this Feb 18, 2019 photo, markings are displayed on glass wall as members work at the WeWork Cos 32nd Milestone co-working space in Gurugram, India. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

A quantum leap in digital adoption and greater high-skilled exports have emerged as the newest drivers of economic growth and jobs in India, according to economists at HSBC Holdings Plc.

Many consumers in India have turned to online services for everything from math tutoring to medical diagnoses and grocery deliveries

The two new economic engines stand to gain from India’s large, young labor force, as well as from global changes, HSBC analysts said in a report to clients.

“The stars seem to have aligned for India’s startups,” HSBC researchers led by Chief India Economist Pranjul Bhandari wrote. “Global liquidity, rising risk appetite, and geopolitical changes have increased the supply of funds. A rapid rise in Indian new-age tech firms has raised the demand for funding.”

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HSBC estimates that half of all foreign direct investment flows into India are now “digital,” up from 20 percent a decade ago. Along with the “new-age” tech firms, high-skill exports have been gaining global market share thanks to demand for mobile phones, machinery, pharmaceutical products and information technology services, the economists said.

India’s success with startups has long lagged that of the US, but the pandemic has helped change that. Many consumers have turned to online services for everything from math tutoring to medical diagnoses and grocery deliveries, which the HSBC economists estimate can add 0.25 percentage points to the country’s gross domestic product every year.

Global investors such as Fidelity Investments, KKR & Co and Singapore’s Temasek Holdings Pte have pumped money into India. The value of venture investment in India reached US$7.9 billion in July, according to researcher Preqin Ltd.