Contents
Introduction
Despite housing 17.5% of the world’s population, India spends only 0.6–0.7% of GDP on &D (UNESCO). This structural deficit undermines ambitions of Viksit Bharat and technological sovereignty.
Scale of the Indian Research Deficit
- Low R&D intensity: India’s GERD-to-GDP ratio remains stagnant at below 1%, far behind China (2.4%), USA (3.5%), and Israel (5.4%), limiting frontier innovation capacity.
- Output mismatch: India produces barely 3% of global research output and around 1.8% of global patent filings (WIPO, 2023), revealing weak conversion of demographic dividend into knowledge capital.
Impact on Strategic and Economic Ambitions
- Technological dependence: Low indigenous R&D forces reliance on technology imports and licensing, constraining self-reliance in semiconductors, defence, AI, and quantum technologies.
- National security risks: As highlighted in the National Security Advisory Board reports, inadequate R&D weakens strategic autonomy in dual-use technologies critical for defence preparedness.
- Lost economic value: Absence of deep-tech innovation restricts India to low-value manufacturing and services, limiting productivity growth and global value-chain upgrading.
Weak Private Sector Participation
- Skewed funding structure: Nearly 64% of R&D spending comes from government and public institutions, while the private sector contributes only ~36%, unlike OECD economies where industry dominates.
- Risk-averse corporate culture: Indian firms prioritise incremental innovation, short-term profitability, and foreign technology absorption over disruptive, long-gestation research.
- Missed scale effect: As noted by Jensen Huang, Huawei’s single-company R&D spend exceeds India’s national R&D outlay, underscoring the absence of corporate-scale innovation bets.
Governance and Institutional Bottlenecks
- Academia–industry disconnect: Reports like the N.R. Narayana Murthy Committee flagged weak technology transfer mechanisms, poor commercialisation, and limited industry-funded research.
- Brain drain: According to OECD migration data, top Indian researchers migrate due to inadequate funding, infrastructure, and career incentives.
- Bureaucratic inefficiencies: Delays in approvals, fragmented funding, and rigid audit norms discourage ambitious, interdisciplinary research.
Role of ANRF and Governance Reforms
- ANRF mandate: The Anusandhan National Research Foundation, under the National Education Policy 2020, aims to coordinate, fund, and scale research across disciplines.
- Crowding-in private investment: By offering co-funding models, mission-mode grants, and industry-linked research clusters, ANRF can de-risk private R&D expenditure.
- Strategic mission approach: Focused national missions in AI, semiconductors, green hydrogen, advanced materials, similar to DARPA (USA), can align innovation with national priorities.
- Institutional autonomy: Streamlined governance, peer-reviewed funding, and outcome-based evaluation can enhance trust among private players.
Way Forward
- Raise R&D spending: Commit to 2% of GDP within five years, as recommended by the Economic Survey.
- Incentivise industry: Expand R&D tax credits, patent commercialisation rewards, and sovereign risk-sharing mechanisms.
- University transformation: Build research universities, industry chairs, and deep-tech incubators to bridge the “valley of death”.
- IP ecosystem strengthening: Faster patent processing, enforcement, and monetisation support to reward innovation.
Conclusion
As Justice K. Subba Rao stressed institutional foresight, innovation demands sustained commitment. Echoing APJ Abdul Kalam, only robust R&D governance can convert India’s talent into transformative national power.


