Relevance: GS-3 (Science & Tech – R&D Ecosystem) | Source: The Hindu

India’s research spending remains low at 0.65% of GDP and is heavily dependent on public funds. To become a knowledge and innovation-driven economy, India needs a predictable, long-term research pipeline that links universities, industry, and markets.

Global Benchmarks (What Works Abroad)

  • Leading tech companies invest 5–20% of revenue in R&D (e.g., Alphabet, Huawei, Meta).
  • Corporate research is strongly aligned with universities, using shared labs, long-horizon projects, and talent pipelines.
  • Countries succeed when they ensure steady, multi-year funding and strong industry–academia collaboration.

Policy Actions Needed for India

1. Set Clear R&D Targets

  • Fix R&D-to-sales ratios for key sectors (pharma, electronics, auto, space, energy).
  • Promote measured, outcome-linked incentives—patents, testing, clinical trials.

2. Strengthen University–Industry Linkages

  • Expand HEI–industry research labs, co-funded projects, and access to shared infrastructure.
  • Support doctoral cohorts aligned to industry problems.

3. Build a Structured Innovation Pipeline

  • Use modern Intellectual Property frameworks to encourage technology transfer.
  • Promote start-ups through incubators, pilot lines, and testbeds in universities.

4. Improve R&D Financing

  • Encourage long-term private investment via tax incentives, predictable grants, and disclosure norms for listed firms.

MCQ

Q. Which of the following can strengthen India’s research ecosystem?

1. Co-funded industry–university projects
2. Setting sector-wise R&D-to-sales ratios
3. Expanding shared research labs in HEIs

Correct Answer: (d) 1, 2 and 3

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