India’s Manufacturing Momentum
Kartavya Desk Staff
Syllabus: Economy
Source: PIB
Context: India’s IIP surged 3.5% YoY in July 2025, led by 5.4% manufacturing growth, and HSBC Manufacturing PMI touched 59.3, its highest in 16 months.
About India’s Manufacturing Momentum:
Current Data & Status:
• IIP Growth: IIP grew 3.5% in July 2025 vs 1.5% in June; manufacturing growth stood at 5.4%, showing demand revival.
• Export Performance: Merchandise exports rose 2.52% YoY (Apr–Aug 2025) to US$ 184.13 billion, led by electronics, pharma, and auto.
• Employment Gains: Unemployment rate eased to 5.0% (male UR at 5-month low), female WPR rose to 32%, showing inclusive job growth.
• FDI Flows: India clocked US$ 81.04 bn FDI inflow in FY25 (+14% YoY); manufacturing FDI grew 18% to US$ 19.04 bn.
Drivers of Manufacturing Sector:
• PLI Scheme: ₹1.97 lakh crore scheme across 14 sectors incentivizes production, boosts exports, and attracts global OEMs.
• National Manufacturing Mission: Integrates ministries, focuses on clean-tech manufacturing (solar, EV batteries, green hydrogen).
• Infrastructure Push: PM GatiShakti and Industrial Corridors are lowering logistics costs and improving connectivity.
• GST 2.0 Reforms: Two-slab GST, rationalized rates, and faster refunds reduce compliance costs and stimulate domestic demand.
• Electronics & Mobile Revolution: 150x jump in mobile manufacturing units (2 → 300), exports crossed ₹2 lakh crore, reducing import dependence.
Impacts on Economy:
• GDP Contribution: Manufacturing contributes 17% of GDP; target is 25% by 2030, helping sustain 7–8% growth trajectory.
• Job Creation: 17 crore jobs created in last decade; manufacturing share in employment rose from 6% (2004-14) to 15% (2014-24).
• Export Competitiveness: Electronics, pharma, and auto sectors anchor India’s export diversification, reducing current account pressure.
• Investment Confidence: Rising FDI inflows reflect global trust in India’s policy stability and industrial potential.
• Regional Development: Emergence of new manufacturing clusters (PM MITRA parks, EMCs) drives balanced growth across states.
Challenges:
• Infrastructure Gaps: Logistics cost still ~13-14% of GDP, higher than global average, hurting competitiveness.
• Skill Mismatch: Shortage of Industry 4.0-ready workforce; need for advanced vocational training and apprenticeships.
• Regulatory Hurdles: Land acquisition delays, multiple compliance layers discourage MSME participation.
• Global Risks: Geopolitical tensions, protectionist policies, supply chain disruptions may impact export momentum.
• Environmental Concerns: Need for green manufacturing to meet Net Zero 2070 targets and ESG norms.
Way Ahead:
• Strengthen Plug-and-Play Parks: Provide ready-to-use infrastructure to MSMEs, reduce gestation period for new projects.
• Skill India 4.0: Create Centres of Excellence, upgrade ITIs, and align curriculum with AI, robotics, and digital manufacturing.
• Tariff Rationalization: Lower customs duties on raw materials (steel, copper, aluminum) to avoid tax-exporting.
• Boost MSMEs: Provide concessional credit, technology upgradation grants, and digital platforms for global market access.
• Global Integration: Accelerate FTAs (UK, EU), deepen role in supply-chain alliances, and secure energy/raw material sources abroad.
Conclusion:
India’s manufacturing momentum signals a structural shift, not a short-term cycle. With sustained reforms, skill-building, and green industrialization, India can become a US$ 1 trillion manufacturing economy by FY26. This transformation is central to realizing Viksit Bharat @ 2047, generating jobs, exports, and global competitiveness.