In recent years, however, India has stressed manufacturing more defence equipment and platforms at home, with global firms pushed to produce in India - either on their own or in collaboration with domestic partners - while increasing their exports of India-made equipment.
India had already been making plenty of its own weaponry, from fighter jets and helicopters to warships, submarines and missiles.
Private-sector entrants, often working with foreign partners, have also brought fresh energy to a sector long dominated by less-nimble state firms that often delivered behind schedule.
India's military exports - including missiles, missile-related systems, munitions, small aircraft, patrol vessels and electronics - jumped 12% in the fiscal year to March to $2.76 billion. Five years back, they totalled just $1.07 billion.
But foreign competition is stiff, both from high-tech producers such as France, Israel and Russia, and from low-cost rivals such as China and Turkey.
A May report by Jefferies said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's praise for how Indian equipment performed against Pakistan "points to further domestic manufacturing focus".
The outlook for Indian defence firms, it added, looks bright with the rise in global military spending, up 9.4% in 2024 and the highest since the end of the Cold War. Europe could be a particularly good source of business as it considers sharply increasing defence spending while tensions mount with Washington.
But there are challenges ahead.
A KPMG report published last week listed budgetary constraints, red tape, dependence on imports and a shortage of skilled workers among the obstacles to growth in the arms sector.
"Addressing these challenges requires strategic planning, increased budget allocations, streamlined procedures, robust policy frameworks, and fostering a culture of innovation and collaboration between the public and private sectors," the report said.
Can India reduce its dependence on imports and become a major global defence supplier? Write to me at yp.rajesh@thomsonreuters.com
No comments:
Post a Comment