The Hindu Editorial
24 June 2026
India’s Next Challenge — From Invention to Global Scale
(Source – The Hindu, Editorial Page no. – 8)
Topic: GS-3: Science & Technology | Innovation | Industrial Development , GS-2: Governance | Technology Policy
Context
- India has repeatedly demonstrated strong scientific and technological capabilities.
- However, many innovations failed to become globally dominant industries.
- The editorial argues that India’s next challenge is not invention, but scaling innovation into globally competitive enterprises.

Core Argument
- Innovation alone is not enough.
- Long-term success requires:
- Scale
- Capital
- Manufacturing ecosystems
- Global markets
- Commercialisation
Key Idea:
“The future belongs not to those who invent first, but to those who scale best.”
Lessons from India’s Experience
Semiconductor Complex Limited (SCL)
- Established in the 1970s.
- Recognised semiconductor importance early.
- Failed to build a global semiconductor ecosystem.
Reasons
- Limited capital
- Small manufacturing scale
- Policy inconsistency
- Weak private-sector participation
ECIL Experience
- Developed indigenous:
- Computers
- Electronics
- Control systems
- Focus remained strategic rather than commercial.
Outcome
- Technological capability remained within institutions.
- Did not create globally competitive industries.
Simputer Example
- Developed by Indian innovators in 1998.
- Anticipated many smartphone features.
Challenge
- Lack of:
- Venture capital
- Software ecosystem
- Supply chains
- Consumer market scale
- Global success eventually captured by smartphones such as the iPhone.
Why Scaling Matters?
Innovation requires:
- Venture capital
- Manufacturing capacity
- Supply-chain ecosystems
- Skilled workforce
- Market access
- Global branding
Without scale:
- Technologies remain prototypes.
- Innovation fails to create economic leadership.
Successful Indian Models
Pharmaceutical Industry
- Became a global manufacturing hub.
- Known as the “Pharmacy of the World.”
- Major vaccine producer.
PARAM Supercomputers
- Demonstrated indigenous computing capability.
- Strengthened technological self-reliance.
Aadhaar & UPI
- Built technology platforms at population scale.
- Created large digital ecosystems.
- Demonstrated how scale can transform society.
Future Growth Areas
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Focus on:
- Affordable AI models
- Energy-efficient computing
- Large-scale deployment
- Public-use applications
Applications:
- Healthcare
- Agriculture
- Education
- Governance
Quantum Computing
Potential sectors:
- Drug discovery
- Climate modelling
- Material science
- Cybersecurity
India should focus on reducing costs and practical deployment.
Space Technology
Building on:
- Chandrayaan
- Mangalyaan
Future opportunities:
- Space-based computing
- Quantum communication
- Satellite infrastructure
- AI-enabled space platforms
UPSC Value Addition
Innovation → Scale Framework
Research → Prototype → Funding → Manufacturing → Market → Global Leadership
Key Enablers
- Venture Capital
- Startup Ecosystem
- Semiconductor Manufacturing
- Skilled Human Capital
- R&D Investment
- Global Partnerships
Challenges
- Low R&D expenditure.
- Weak deep-tech financing ecosystem.
- Dependence on imported technology components.
- Gap between research and commercialisation.
- Limited global technology brands.
Way Forward
- Increase public and private R&D spending.
- Strengthen semiconductor ecosystem.
- Promote deep-tech venture capital.
- Support innovation-to-market pipelines.
- Encourage industry-academia collaboration.
- Build globally competitive manufacturing ecosystems.
- Focus on commercialization alongside invention.
Conclusion
- India has already demonstrated world-class scientific capability. The next stage of development requires transforming innovation into globally scalable industries that generate economic power, technological leadership and strategic autonomy.