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Innovation isn't just about labs: It needs buyers to rely upon too

Mint New Delhi

|

April 28, 2025

The government should step in forcefully with its visible hand to generate demand that the market's invisible hand cannot

- VARUN AGGARWAL & ADITYA SINHA

In the early 2000s, when India aimed to indigenize its multi-barrel rocket-launcher capability, the Union ministry of defence broke new ground by awarding procurement-linked development contracts not to public sector units, but to private firms like Tata Power SED and Larsen & Toubro. Appointed as lead system integrators, they invested heavily in research and development (R&D), driven by firm procurement commitments. This success was enabled by the active role played by the government in shaping the market. The 'invisible hand' of the market often fails to efficiently allocate resources for R&D due to several structural challenges. For one, innovation typically involves long gestation periods and entails a high risk of failure. It took decades for AI to evolve from theory to application; the Human Genome Project required 13 years and billions in public funding; autonomous cars have started to show some promise after two decades of work.

R&D also suffers from 'appropriability gaps.' Innovations often generate knowledge spillovers, benefits that others can capture without paying for them. This is why innovation is considered a quasi-public good. For instance, Google's investment in transformer models laid the groundwork for OpenAI's breakthroughs, just as deep learning's foundational work emerged from publicly funded research at institutions like University of Toronto.

Thus, private incentives alone are insufficient. This necessitates the visible hand of the state via the creation of complex institutional architectures: outcome-contingent R&D funds, mission-driven procurement systems, co-financed translational research platforms and intellectual property-sharing consortia that align private incentives with long-term public returns.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

The words we aren't using

Listen. That's all I did one afternoon at the Museum of Art and Photography in Bengaluru last week.

time to read

1 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Former DBS CEO is Temasek India's new non-exec chair

Piyush Gupta, the former chief executive of DBS Group, has joined Singaporean state-owned multinational investment firm Temasek as India chairman, albeit in a non-exec role, and will work with Ravi Lambah, head of India and strategic initiatives, the firm said. He will join on 1 December.

time to read

1 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Apple's 5th India store to open in Noida soon

Apple announced on Friday it will open its fifth retail store in India on 1 December in Noida's DLF Mall of India—marking its second store in the National Capital Region after Delhi, which opened in April 2023.

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

120 ways of cooking your vegetables

Restaurateur Camellia Panjabi's new cookbook is a deep dive into the country’s vast and varied vegetarian cuisine

time to read

4 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Tiramisu is trending and nobody is complaining

Tiramisu, tiramisu latte, rasgulla tiramisu, masala chai tiramisu, tiramisu tres leches—it seems like almost every café or restaurant across the country has some version of the Italian dessert on its menu.

time to read

4 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Former DBS CEO is Temasek India’s new non-exec chair

Piyush Gupta, the former chief executive of DBS Group, has joined Singaporean state-owned multinational investment firm Temasek as India chairman, albeit in a non-executive role, and will work with Ravi Lambah, head of India and strategic initiatives, the firm said, He will join on 1 December.

time to read

1 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Everything that’s wrong with India’s development story

This new book inquires into the conditions under which India has tried to develop in the past 75-plus years

time to read

4 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Two women navigate love and politics in Mumbai

This novel's charm lies less in plot twists and more in the lived-in world of the millennial women it depicts accurately

time to read

3 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Art Deco feels in Indian fashion

The 100-year-old style has inspired design worldwide. Why doesn't it have a big presence in Indian fashion?

time to read

4 mins

November 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

India hopes to seal US reciprocal tariff pact by end of Dec

India is looking to finalize a framework agreement on reciprocal tariffs with the US by the end of this year, said commerce secretary Rajesh Agrawal, marking a significant step toward resolving the strained bilateral trade between the two countries.

time to read

1 mins

November 29, 2025

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