ARGUMENTATIVE INDIANS PODCAST
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ARGUMENTATIVE INDIANS PODCAST
Is India's Defence Import Ban A Good Move?
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Argumentative Indians
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Season 1
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Episode 42
Recently, several independent outlets reported that the #indianmilitary could be running out of critical weapons and equipment due to imposed restrictions. It was estimated that India would be left critically short of high-performance helicopters by 2026 and combat jets by 2030, amongst other important assets for #nationalsecurity . That claim was further reinforced when, recently, the Indian Army invited the defence industry to offer critical equipment for emergency procurement.
In the two years between August 2020 to August 2022, India promulgated four Positive Indigenisation Lists - defence weapons and equipment, which can not be imported from abroad. With India’s domestic defence industry still nascent, the world’s biggest defence importer isn’t manufacturing enough weapons locally and official rules are blocking imports. Considering that in the last two decades, India has spent close to 54 billion USD on defence related imports, primarily #russianarmy , has India ill-timed its self-reliance mission in the context of global geopolitical realities and the restive borders with China and Pakistan?
That claim may be disputed as India’s efforts to ‘unleash the energy' of the Make-in-India initiative in the defence sector have now begun to show results. In the last five years, India’s defence related exports have grown by a massive 334% and the country now exports to over 75 countries. For the first time, the Indian defence industry now has a global presence as part of the supply chain. The innovation ecosystem developed under the iDEX programme, Make2 and DRDO programmes have garnered global attention. However, India still stands vulnerable during this period of transition, until its domestic industry fully matures as a competent global innovator.
To understand whether “India’s defence import ban is a good move?” eminent experts join Argumentative Indians in a LIVE discussion.
In the two years between August 2020 to August 2022, India promulgated four Positive Indigenisation Lists - defence weapons and equipment, which can not be imported from abroad. With India’s domestic defence industry still nascent, the world’s biggest defence importer isn’t manufacturing enough weapons locally and official rules are blocking imports. Considering that in the last two decades, India has spent close to 54 billion USD on defence related imports, primarily #russianarmy , has India ill-timed its self-reliance mission in the context of global geopolitical realities and the restive borders with China and Pakistan?
That claim may be disputed as India’s efforts to ‘unleash the energy' of the Make-in-India initiative in the defence sector have now begun to show results. In the last five years, India’s defence related exports have grown by a massive 334% and the country now exports to over 75 countries. For the first time, the Indian defence industry now has a global presence as part of the supply chain. The innovation ecosystem developed under the iDEX programme, Make2 and DRDO programmes have garnered global attention. However, India still stands vulnerable during this period of transition, until its domestic industry fully matures as a competent global innovator.
To understand whether “India’s defence import ban is a good move?” eminent experts join Argumentative Indians in a LIVE discussion.
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