India is variously described as a knowledge-based economy in
the making thanks essentially due to her high economic growth and the
role played by knowledge-intensive sectors such as Information
Technology in spurring and maintaining this high growth performance.
There is also a strong feeling among especially the West that India is
becoming very innovative. The study will take the reader through the
empirical evidence on whether this is indeed the case since the reform
process of 1991. A variety of conventional (in the absence of new
indicators such as the results of innovation surveys) are analysed and
their movements over the last two decades or so chartered to draw some
firm conclusions on this front. The conventional indicators considered
are the growth in research intensity, patenting, scientific publications,
and technology balance of payments. The study is organised into five
parts. In the first part I will discuss certain macro features of the growth
performance over the last two decades or so and thus sketch the context
in which the study is conducted. In the second I engage myself with the
literature on measuring innovation using a variety of indicators. In the
third section I measure the actual innovative performance of India’s
economy since economic liberalization by employing a variety of these
indicators. The ensuing analysis shows that the growth in innovations
is not widespread but concentrated in certain specific sectoral systems
of innovation such as in the case of the pharmaceutical industry. In the
process of analyzing and piecing together this evidence, the fourth
section identifies certain disquieting features which can act as limiting
factor to the future innovative potential of the nation. Two such factors
are identified and analysed: first, the financing of innovation and second,
the availability and quality of science and engineering personnel. The
fifth section concludes by examining the efforts made by the government
to overcome these two constraints through public policy initiatives.
Key words: India, innovation, R&, patents, technology balance of
payment, high-tech industry, financing of innovation,
technical education
JEL Classification: O31; O32; O34
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Mani, Sunil (2009) Has India become more innovative since 1991? : analysis of the evidence and some disquieting features. CDS working papers, no.415. Trivandrum: CDS.