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Home>Current Affairs>NITI Aayog Reports on “Ease of Doing Research & Development in India”
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NITI Aayog Reports on “Ease of Doing Research & Development in India”

SYLLABUS

GS-3: Conservation, Environmental Pollution and Degradation. 

Context: NITI Aayog recently released two reports on Ease of Doing Research & Development in India, aimed at enabling a more efficient, facilitative, and innovation-driven research ecosystem in the country.

More on the News

• The reports provide a comprehensive assessment of India’s R&D ecosystem and outline a set of actionable recommendations focused on improving funding mechanisms, institutional governance, regulatory frameworks, and research translation. 

• A key emphasis is on shifting towards a more trust-based, outcome-oriented, and facilitative environment to enable researchers and institutions to perform at their full potential.

• This initiative aligns with India’s vision of becoming a global innovation hub under the “Viksit Bharat” framework. 

Key Highlights of the Reports

ROPE Framework (Removing Obstacles, Promoting Enablers): The reports propose the ROPE framework as a central reform strategy to eliminate bureaucratic hurdles and promote a supportive ecosystem for research and innovation. 

Focus on “Lab-to-Market” Translation: There is a strong emphasis on translating research into commercially viable technologies, moving beyond academic outputs to real-world applications. 

Enhancing Funding Mechanisms: The reports recommend diversifying funding sources, including greater private sector and CSR participation, to supplement public investment. 

  • The reports stress the need to better leverage the ₹1 lakh crore Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) / Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) fund. 

Governance and Regulatory Reforms: Simplification of procedures, reduction in approvals, and improved institutional governance are highlighted as critical to improving ease of doing R&D. 

Building a Trust-Based Ecosystem: The reports advocate a shift from compliance-heavy systems to trust-based frameworks, enabling researchers to focus on innovation rather than administrative burdens.

State of India’s R&D Landscape

• India has emerged as a significant global knowledge producer, with rising research output and has improved its ranking to 38th on the Global Innovation Index. 

• However, the Gross Expenditure on R&D (GERD) remains low at around 0.6–0.7% of GDP, which is significantly below leading innovation economies. 

• The R&D ecosystem is largely public-sector driven, with the private sector contributing less than 40% of total R&D, a stark contrast to advanced economies where the private sector accounts for over 70%. 

• Further, according to the WIPO World Intellectual Property Indicators (WIPI) 2024 report, India ranked 6th globally in patent applications with 64,480 filings in 2023. 

Challenges to India’s R&D Ecosystem

Funding and incentives: Low overall R&D investment, rigid budgeting cycles, and delay ridden grant disbursements make it difficult for researchers to sustain medium  and long term projects.

Bureaucratic and procedural hurdles: Cumbersome procurement rules, multi layered approvals, and over cautious risk aversion slow the import of scientific equipment and raw materials, and add to project timelines.

Fragmented ecosystem: Research laboratories, universities, and industries often operate in parallel, with limited formal mechanisms for joint projects, shared infrastructure, and commercialisation partnerships.

Translation gap: While India produces a sizable number of research papers, the system struggles to convert these into patents, scalable products, and industrial applications, reflecting weak technology transfer and IP management support.

Institutional and cultural barriers: Faculty centric teaching loads, limited incentives for applied research, and slow adoption of digital tools and big data enabled science constrain the culture of innovation in many institutions.

Measures Taken to Strengthen India’s R&D Ecosystem

Institutional Reforms and Funding Support: The establishment of initiatives such as the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) and the RDI Scheme aims to streamline funding mechanisms and promote high-quality research across disciplines. 

Promotion of Innovation and Startups: Initiatives such as the Atal Innovation Mission and Startup India have strengthened the innovation ecosystem by encouraging entrepreneurship and applied research. 

Mission-Mode Research Initiatives: The government has prioritised mission-driven research in strategic sectors such as artificial intelligence, clean energy, and biotechnology to address national priorities. 

Digital and Collaborative Platforms: Efforts have been made to develop digital platforms and research networks to enhance collaboration, data sharing, and coordination among institutions.

Way Ahead

Increase and channelise R&D funding: India needs to raise R&D intensity to at least 1.5–2% of GDP over the medium term, with a clear roadmap to shift the balance toward higher private sector participation and mission oriented public investment.

Deepen industry–academia linkages: Stronger mechanisms for joint research, shared infrastructure, and technology transfer offices are required, along with fiscal incentives for corporate R&D, and CSR linked innovation funding.

Regulatory and procedural reform: Simplified procurement, flexible cost recovery, shorter approval timelines, and harmonised rules across ministries will reduce the “ease of doing R&D” gap compared to international peers.

Strengthen IP and translation ecosystems: Institutions need better support for patent filing, licensing, incubation, and proof of concept funding so that laboratory outputs can move swiftly toward the market.

SOURCES:
PIB
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NITI Aayog Reports on “Ease of Doing Research & Development in India” | Current Affairs