Budgetary allowances alone will not solve India’s R&D problem
Context
- The Union Cabinet has approved a ₹1-lakh crore Research Development and Innovation (RDI)
- It aims to incentivise private sector investment in basic and core research, an area traditionally dominated by the government.
- The scheme will be operationalised through the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF).
Key Features of the Scheme:
| Feature | Details |
| Fund Size | ₹1 lakh crore |
| Implementing Body | ANRF (under Department of Science & Technology) |
| Type of Support | Primarily low-interest loans to private entities |
| Eligibility Criteria | Only projects at Technology Readiness Level 4 (TRL-4) and above |
What is TRL-4?
- A concept developed by NASA, the Technology Readiness Level scale ranges from:
- TRL-1: Basic principles observed
- TRL-9: Actual system proven in operational environment
- TRL-4 means “Technology validated in lab” — a mid-level threshold requiring some prior advancement in development.
India’s R&D Landscape:
- Current R&D Spending: ~65% of GDP (as per DST, 2022), much below:
- USA: 2.8%
- China: 2.4%
- South Korea: 4.5%
- Spending Breakdown:
- Govt: ~70%
- Private Sector: ~30%
- In contrast, in developed economies, private sector leads R&D investment.
Key Issues Highlighted:
1. Restrictive Eligibility (TRL-4 cutoff):
- Excludes early-stage innovations, where private capital is most needed.
- Contradicts the nature of breakthrough innovations, which often start at TRL-1 or 2.
2. Neglect of Strategic Public Investment:
- The U.S. invested in technologies like GPS, Internet, radar through military R&D, not private industry alone.
- India’s lack of a comparable military-industrial research complex hinders risk-heavy R&D.
3. Brain Drain:
- Scientists and researchers leave for countries offering better infrastructure, research ecosystems, and academic freedom.
4. Weak High-Tech Manufacturing Base:
- There is a gap between lab-level innovation and commercial-scale manufacturing.
- No robust ecosystem for deep-tech prototyping or productisation.
Implications for India:
| Area | Implication |
| Academia | Limited funding for blue-sky/basic research |
| Private Sector | Incentives could lead to tech commercialization if implementation is smooth |
| Innovation | Risk of short-termism; low support for moonshot projects |
| Global Standing | Without structural reforms, India may continue lagging in global innovation rankings |
Way Forward:
- Broaden Eligibility:
- Include TRL 1–3 projects and provide grant-based support, not just loans.
- Strengthen ANRF Autonomy:
- Ensure academic freedom, peer-reviewed evaluations, and insulation from bureaucratic red tape.
- Military–Industry Collaboration:
- Emulate models like DARPA (USA) or Fraunhofer Institutes (Germany) to develop high-risk technologies with public funds.
- Boost Domestic Manufacturing Capacity:
- Align R&D policies with PLI schemes, Semiconductor Missions, and Make in India
- Retain Talent:
- Create attractive career pathways for researchers, including in startups, labs, and think tanks.





