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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.

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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