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What India Should Take—and Avoid—from China’s Industrial Policy

7 min read
Engineers work in a factory while one examines a precision component between an active research workshop and rows of idle machinery.

India’s industrial-policy question is no longer simply whether the state should support manufacturing. The more useful question is what public money should leave behind: additional output during an incentive period, or durable competence in design, process engineering, supply chains and workforce development.

The supplied source approaches that question through China’s combination of industrial successes and costly failures, then applies the lessons to Indian incentive programmes. Because the source material contains one article, its specific claims are attributed rather than presented as independently corroborated; the synthesis below concentrates on the policy framework that emerges from its contrasting examples.

Capability, not expenditure, is the strategic objective

A factory and an industrial capability are not the same thing. A factory consists of physical assets and organised production. A capability also includes the knowledge needed to design products, control processes, maintain equipment, train workers, improve yields, qualify suppliers and respond when imported technology becomes unavailable.

The DharmaRenaissance article argues that this distinction should govern Indian subsidy policy. Land concessions, tax relief, grants, inexpensive credit and imported machinery may reduce the cost of establishing a plant, but they cannot by themselves supply the scientific knowledge or operating discipline required in a technologically demanding sector. Public assistance therefore needs to purchase learning as well as production.

This changes the central policy question. Output and investment remain relevant, but the state must also ask what Indian firms, workers and suppliers will know how to do after the supported project is completed. Design ownership, testing capacity, tooling, process improvement, technical training and collaboration with research institutions become strategic outcomes rather than incidental expenses.

The source summarises this position as “no R&D, no subsidy.” That principle need not exclude smaller firms or require every applicant to operate a frontier laboratory. It means that each recipient should present a credible path towards greater technical competence, appropriate to its industry and stage of development.

China’s record contains both a model and a warning

An advanced factory operates beside partially idle duplicate plants and warehouses filled with unsold goods.

According to the source article, China has developed substantial strength in solar equipment, batteries, electric vehicles, telecommunications, shipbuilding, high-speed rail and electronics assembly, while also making progress in semiconductor packaging and mature-node manufacturing. The article attributes these outcomes not to subsidy alone, but to its combination with accumulated research, manufacturing discipline, export pressure, supplier development and state monitoring.

The reported failure of Hongxin Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. in Wuhan illustrates the opposite pattern. The project promised production at 14-nanometre and 7-nanometre process nodes and acquired expensive lithography equipment, but the source says it lacked the research base, engineering maturity, operating record and governance safeguards needed to deliver that ambition. The result, as reported by the article, was an abandoned facility and unpaid workers.

The contrast matters more than either example in isolation. Successful industrial policy joined financial assistance to a system of learning and performance. The failed project treated visible expenditure as evidence of invisible competence. Advanced manufacturing exposes that error quickly because machinery works only as part of a wider technical system involving materials, software, maintenance, metrology, quality control and process integration.

The source also describes the costs of excessive or poorly governed support: overcapacity, weak firms sustained by politically available credit, local protectionism and projects pursued for the value of their announcements. China’s experience therefore does not yield a simple instruction to subsidise more or less. It suggests that the quality of selection, supervision and exit rules determines whether assistance produces capability or dependence.

Indian incentives need a tougher test than production alone

Indian engineers, trainers and suppliers inspect a precision machine while apprentices and component makers work nearby.

The article places this lesson in the context of India’s Production Linked Incentive schemes, semiconductor support, defence indigenisation, electronics programmes, green-energy incentives and public procurement. It credits production-linked incentives with influencing investment decisions in electronics, pharmaceuticals, telecom equipment, solar modules, drones and automotive components. That assessment belongs to the source; the larger policy issue is how the next phase can move beyond incremental production.

An incentive tied mainly to finished units can attract assembly while leaving design, critical components, tooling and process knowledge abroad. Domestic output may rise without providing resilience against the interruption of foreign equipment, software or inputs. A capability-oriented programme would consequently examine where value is created, which dependencies are being reduced and whether local suppliers are becoming technically stronger.

The source’s proposals can be organised as a sequence of policy gates. At selection, an applicant would need a technology plan explaining the knowledge gap to be closed and the intended spending on research, testing, certification, tooling, training and supplier upgrading. This would allow evaluators to distinguish a technically plausible learning programme from a large financial projection.

During implementation, disbursement would follow verified milestones rather than rely predominantly on large upfront commitments. The article identifies possible evidence including pilot production, improved yields, localisation of important inputs, certification, export orders, meaningful patent activity, absorption of transferred technology and independently audited research spending. The relevant indicators would vary by sector; a battery project and a semiconductor project should not be judged through an identical checklist.

Oversight would combine contractual accountability with specialised technical judgment. The source recommends enforceable clawbacks when funds are diverted, investment claims are inflated, agreed milestones are missed or a supported operation closes after receiving assistance. It also argues for evaluation by engineers, scientists, manufacturing veterans, supply-chain specialists, financial experts and technologists familiar with the particular industry, rather than administrative review alone.

Finally, assistance would be patient but finite. Technical development takes time and uncertain projects cannot be managed as though every delay proves misconduct. Yet patience should not become an open-ended entitlement. Predetermined review points, transparent evidence and credible termination rules are what allow the state to absorb strategic risk without insulating recipients permanently from performance.

Key takeaways

  • The proper output of industrial policy is a lasting national capability, not merely a subsidised volume of goods.
  • China’s reported successes joined state support to research, export pressure, manufacturing discipline and sustained learning.
  • The Hongxin case, as described by the source, shows why expensive equipment and ambitious process-node claims cannot substitute for engineering maturity.
  • Indian incentives should assess design, tooling, testing, supplier development, workforce skills and process improvement alongside investment and production.
  • Milestone-based payments, independent technical review, clawbacks and finite support can make strategic risk-taking compatible with public accountability.

Competition after support is the decisive measure

An Indian-made machine moves beyond temporary factory scaffolding toward an open market and side-by-side performance testing.

The source positions India between two unhelpful extremes: indefinite protection for inefficient firms and a passive state that expects individual companies to bear every strategic risk. A middle course would support markets without assuming that market incentives alone will build every capability required for national resilience.

That middle course requires the government to behave less like a distributor of concessions and more like a demanding strategic investor. It must tolerate technically defensible risk, recognise that some projects will fail, and stop supporting enterprises that repeatedly fail without producing useful knowledge. A discontinued project need not invalidate industrial policy; concealing failure or refinancing it without learning does.

The cleanest test comes after assistance recedes. If a recipient can improve productivity, deepen its supplier network, retain technical knowledge and compete beyond the protected programme, the subsidy has helped create wealth. If its business remains viable only while public support continues, the programme has transferred resources without resolving the underlying capability gap.

India’s next industrial-policy phase should therefore make technical learning an explicit contract between the state and the recipient. Linking money to knowledge, measurable progress and an enforceable exit would turn strategic ambition into a cumulative industrial base rather than a succession of announced factories.

References

FAQs

What is the difference between a factory and an industrial capability?

A factory provides physical assets and organised production. An industrial capability also includes product design, process control, equipment maintenance, worker training, yield improvement, supplier qualification and the ability to cope when imported technology is unavailable.

What does “no R&D, no subsidy” mean for Indian industrial policy?

It means subsidy recipients should show a credible, sector-appropriate path to greater technical competence, not that every firm must operate a frontier laboratory. Public support should fund learning through research, testing, tooling, certification, training and supplier upgrading as well as production.

What should India learn from China’s successful industrial policy?

The article’s central lesson is that subsidy works best when combined with accumulated research, manufacturing discipline, export pressure, supplier development and state monitoring. India should aim to build durable knowledge and production systems, not simply finance more capacity.

What warning does the Hongxin semiconductor project offer?

As described by the source, Hongxin paired ambitious process-node claims and expensive equipment with an inadequate research base, limited engineering maturity and weak governance safeguards. Its reported failure shows that visible spending cannot substitute for the technical system needed to operate advanced manufacturing.

How should India link industrial subsidies to performance?

Applicants should begin with a technology plan, and payments should follow verified, sector-specific milestones. Evidence could include pilot production, better yields, localisation of key inputs, certification, export orders, meaningful patent activity, technology absorption and independently audited research spending.

What oversight and exit rules does the article recommend?

Oversight should combine enforceable contracts with review by relevant technical and financial experts. Programmes should use predetermined review points, clawbacks for diversion or inflated claims, and credible termination rules while allowing time for technically defensible development.

How can India tell whether an industrial subsidy created lasting capability?

The decisive test comes after assistance recedes: the recipient should be able to improve productivity, deepen its supplier network, retain technical knowledge and compete beyond the protected programme. If the business remains viable only while support continues, the underlying capability gap has not been resolved.