The background and importance of ‘delayed gratification’, the signature phrase in the Economic Survey 2025-26
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. NEW DELHI : The marshmallow test, a social experiment at Stanford University in the 1960s and 1970s, made a comeback Thursday halfway across the world in New Delhi—in the Economic Survey penned by chief economic adviser Venkatramanan Anantha Nageswaran and team. The test, credited to American psychologist Walter Mischel, was simple.
Cohorts of four-year-olds at a pre-school on the sunny Stanford campus in California were given a marshmallow and two choices: they could have it immediately. Or, if a child waited for 15 minutes, she or he would get two marshmallows. The message: small reward now, bigger reward later.
The kids who were able to hold off for “delayed gratification" not only got more marshmallows, but when Mischel and his team of researchers revisited them as teenagers and young adults, they were significantly ahead of peers on parameters such as self-assuredness, scholastic scores, social competence, self-worth, and other personality vectors. Those who settled for one marshmallow lagged had higher chances of aggressive behaviour and other conduct disorders. Delayed gratification was a dominant theme in Thursday's Economic Survey.
Madurai-born Nageswaran opened the theme with Yama's message in the Katha Upanishad: “Every moment asks us to choose between Śreya, the enduring good, and Preya, the fleeting comfort. The mature mind chooses Śreya; the immature mind settles for Preya. In other words, the country stands to gain immensely when all of us embrace delayed gratification." The Survey, a document that signposts the state of the economy between two fiscal years, referred to the phrase nine times—to drive home the point how working hard with a long window is what delivers
. Read on livemint.com