INDIA’S GLOBAL FOOTPRINT

Introduction:

Economic Survey 2025-26 describing its growth rates as “the envy of the world”. Despite global trade policy uncertainty, India is successfully pairing targeted import substitution with an export-oriented approach to build resilient supply chains and stay competitive long-term.

Trade Performance: April–January 2025-26

India’s export ecosystem has demonstrated significant resilience, driven by high-value commodities and widening global partnerships.

CategoryValue (Apr-Jan 2025-26)Growth (YoY)
Cumulative ExportsUSD 720.76 billion+6.15%
Services ExportsUSD 354.13 billion+10.57%
Merchandise ExportsEstimated GrowthWide category pull
    • Services Strength: India’s services surplus reached an all-time high of USD 188.8 billion in FY25, powered by Global Capability Centres (GCCs) and AI skill penetration.
    • Diversification: India ranks among the top five Global South economies for trade product diversity and among the top three for partnership diversity.

Building Domestic Capabilities

The Union Budget 2026-27 places a sharp focus on strategic sectors to reduce critical import dependence and scale manufacturing.

1. Electronics and Semiconductors

India aims for a $500 billion domestic electronics ecosystem by 2030-31.

    • Mobile Production: Near self-reliance achieved; production rose from ₹18,000 crore (2014-15) to ₹5.45 lakh crore (2024-25).
    • Semiconductor Missions: ISM 2.0 launched to design full-stack Indian IP; first commercial Silicon Carbide fab approved in Odisha.
    • Investment: The Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) outlay was increased to ₹40,000 crore in the latest budget.

2. Automotive Industry

    • Global Standing: India is the world’s largest market for 2-wheelers/3-wheelers and the third-largest for passenger/commercial vehicles.
    • Green Shift: The PM E-DRIVE Scheme (₹10,900 crore) supports demand incentives for electric trucks, ambulances, and 2W/3W.

3. Pharmaceuticals (“Pharmacy of the World”)

    • Ranking: 3rd largest producer by volume; recorded an annual turnover of ₹4.72 lakh crore in FY25.
    • Self-Reliance: PLI for Bulk Drugs has created a manufacturing capacity of 55,000 MT for 26 critical products.

4. Defence and Strategic Manufacturing

    • Aatmanirbharta: Domestic manufacturing reached a record ₹1.54 lakh crore in FY24-25; at least 65% of equipment is now made in India.
    • Target: The government aims for ₹3 lakh crore in manufacturing and ₹50,000 crore in exports by 2029.

Export Promotion Mission (EPM)

To empower MSMEs and first-time exporters, the government approved the EPM with a ₹25,060 crore outlay (FY26-FY31).

Scheme ComponentSupport Detail
Export Factoring2.75% interest subvention on working capital for MSMEs
E-Commerce CreditUp to ₹50 lakh direct credit with 90% guarantee coverage
TRACEReimburses up to 75% of costs for international certifications
FLOWSupports 30% of project costs for overseas warehousing/fulfillment
LIFTFreight reimbursement (up to 30%) for low export-intensity districts

Challenges & Way Forward

    • While LIFT offsets freight for low-intensity districts, overall logistics costs as a percentage of GDP remain higher than global benchmarks. The Way Forward requires faster integration of the National Logistics Policy with PM GatiShakti.
    • While electronics have surged, deepening India’s presence in high-value segments of Global Value Chains (GVCs) requires sustained R&D investment beyond assembly.
    • As seen with the TRACE initiative, meeting stringent ESG and technical standards in markets like the EU remains a hurdle for smaller exporters.

Conclusion:

India’s experience proves that import substitution and export strength can thrive simultaneously.

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