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Can India Convert Public Research Funding Into Technological Capability?

Context: The article argues that India must use public research financing to mobilise sustained private investment in strategic technologies, commercialisation capacity and long-term institutional research.

Source: “India now has the funds, the talent and the opening for a research leap,” The Indian Express, July 18, 2026.

Core Points

  • Dependence on foreign technologies creates vulnerabilities when export controls, licences and supply chains are used as instruments of geopolitical policy.
  • India’s gross expenditure on research and development is approximately 0.64% of GDP, below the levels recorded by several major innovation-driven economies.
  • The public sector accounts for roughly 60% of India’s R&D expenditure, while private enterprise contributes about 35–36%.
  • The ₹1 lakh crore Research, Development and Innovation Scheme seeks to attract private investment into high-risk and deep-technology research.
  • Its two-tier structure places a special-purpose fund within the Anusandhan National Research Foundation, with resources channelled through second-level fund managers.
  • Eligible projects include technologies in energy, climate action, quantum computing, robotics, space, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, medical devices and other strategic sectors.
  • Public financing can reduce early-stage risk, but companies must still commit their own capital, choose strategically important technologies and establish durable research institutions.
  • Stronger collaboration among industry, universities, start-ups and global capability centres can help convert scientific research into commercial technologies.
  • India’s engineering talent, digital infrastructure and the global demand for diversified technology suppliers create an opportunity, but not a guarantee, for technological advancement.

Prelims Relevance

  • The Anusandhan National Research Foundation is a statutory body established under the ANRF Act, 2023.
  • Its Governing Board is chaired by the Prime Minister.
  • Technology Readiness Levels describe the maturity of a technology from basic principles to operational deployment.
  • A fund of funds invests through intermediary funds rather than financing every enterprise directly.

Mains Relevance

  • GS III — Science and technology policy, research financing, innovation, intellectual property, deep technology and self-reliance.
  • GS II — Institutional coordination among government, universities, industry and research organisations.

Supporting Fact Box

  • The RDI Scheme has a corpus of ₹1 lakh crore and is intended to operate over six years.
  • The Department of Science and Technology is its nodal implementing department.
  • The Technology Development Board and Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council have been designated as second-level fund managers.
  • Funding is intended principally for technologies at Technology Readiness Level 4 and above through long-term concessional financing and other risk-sharing instruments.
  • India’s private sector contributes about 35–36% of national R&D expenditure, compared with more than 70% in several innovation-driven economies.