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Indian Startup Ecosystem

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Economy

Source: IE

Context: Indian Commerce Minister sharply criticized the Indian startup ecosystem for being focused on consumer-centric ventures like food delivery apps, calling for a shift toward deep-tech innovation.

About Indian Startup Ecosystem:

Third Largest Startup Ecosystem Globally: India has over 100+ unicorns, driven by digital payments, e-commerce, and consumer-tech.

E.g. India added over 20 unicorns in 2023, with many focusing on logistics, ed-tech, and fintech.

Policy Backing from the Government: Initiatives like Startup India, Digital India, and IndiaAI Mission have enabled startup growth.

E.g. ₹10,000 crore Deep-Tech Fund and India Semiconductor Mission are recent efforts.

Youth and Talent Pool: With over 65% of the population under 35, India has a rich base of tech-savvy youth and engineers.

E.g. India produces over 1.5 million engineers annually.

High Global Visibility: Indian-origin leaders like Sundar Pichai (Google) and Satya Nadella (Microsoft) exemplify Indian tech prowess globally.

E.g. Indian founders are also at the helm of AI, cybersecurity, and fintech ventures abroad.

Improving Digital Infrastructure: UPI, Aadhaar, and BharatNet have laid a digital foundation for startups to thrive.

E.g. India processed over 100 billion UPI transactions in 2023.

Key Issues in India’s Startup Ecosystem:

Consumer-Tech Saturation: Heavy focus on short-cycle consumer ventures like quick commerce and food delivery.

E.g. Most unicorns are not deep-tech but rely on B2C efficiency and customer acquisition.

Low Deep-Tech Funding: Startups in AI, quantum, or space-tech get a fraction of funding compared to China or the US.

E.g. Deep-tech startups received $1.6 billion in 2024, despite a 78% YoY rise.

Limited Risk-Taking by VCs: Indian VCs seek quick returns and avoid long-gestation tech projects.

E.g. Unlike US investors backing 10+ year ventures (like SpaceX), Indian VCs are conservative.

Weak Academia-Industry Linkages: Poor R&D infrastructure and limited collaboration between universities and startups.

E.g. Indian universities rarely feature in global innovation or patent rankings.

Regulatory Bottlenecks: Angel tax (now scrapped), compliance overload, and exit barriers discouraged innovation.

E.g. Complex regulatory norms reduce startup ease of doing business.

Way Ahead:

Increase Public Investment in R&D: Raise R&D spending to at least 2% of GDP from the current sub-1% level.

E.g. US, Germany spend over 3%; China 2.6% — India lags far behind.

Strengthen Academic-Industry Collaboration: Build Centres of Excellence for AI, quantum, and semiconductors with institutional support.

E.g. Link IITs with emerging startups in defence-tech and biosciences.

Focus on Education and Upskilling: Revamp STEM education to train students in emerging technologies early on.

E.g. NDTSP 2023 pushes for early exposure to AI, robotics, and semiconductor design.

Provide Patient Capital: Encourage long-term VC funds and sovereign wealth support for deep-tech innovation.

E.g. Rs 10,000 crore Deep-Tech Fund should be scaled and strategically deployed.

Streamline Regulatory Support: Simplify IP rights, fast-track patent approvals, and remove bottlenecks in funding and FDI.

E.g. Adopt a NASA–DARPA-style mission-mode structure to back moonshot projects.

Conclusion:

India’s startup ecosystem is at an inflection point. Consumer-tech has built foundational strengths, but deep-tech is essential for strategic sovereignty and global leadership. With the right policies, patient capital, and education reforms, India can script a new era of transformative innovation.

• What is the status of digitalization in the Indian economy? Examine the problems faced in this regard and suggest improvements.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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