The Asian Age

India eyes $25bn defence manufactur­ing turnover by ’25

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New Delhi, Aug. 3: The government is eyeing a turnover of `1.75 lakh crore ($25 billion) in defence manufactur­ing by 2025 as it has identified the sector as a potential driver to boost the overall economy, according to a draft of a major policy prepared by the defence ministry.

The draft Defence Production and Export Promotion Policy 2020 (DPEPP) set an export target of `35,000 crore ($5 billion) in aerospace and defence goods and services in the next five years, which has been estimated as part of the total projected turnover.

The policy is envisaged as overarchin­g guiding document of the defence ministry to provide a “focused, structured and significan­t” thrust to production of military hardware and platforms for self-reliance and exports, officials said.

Officials said the policy is aimed at developing a dynamic, robust and competitiv­e defence industry, including aerospace and naval shipbuildi­ng, to cater to the needs of the armed forces.

In May, finance minster Nirmala Sitharaman rolled out a number of reform measures for the defence sector including making separate budgetary outlay to procure Indian-made military hardware, increasing FDI limit from 49 per cent to 74 per cent under the automatic route and generating a year-wise negative list of weapons which will not be allowed to import.

India is one of the most lucrative markets for global defence giants as it figured among top three importers of military hardware in the world for the last eight years.

According to estimates, the Indian armed forces are projected to spend around $130 billion in capital procuremen­t in the next five years.

The draft defence policy also prescribed a framework to reduce dependence on imports and take forward the "Make in India" initiative­s through domestic design and developmen­t.

It also suggested steps to promote export of defence products to make India become part of the global defence supply chain.

The officials said the policy paper made several key recommenda­tions to boost defence manufactur­ing so that the sector compliment­s the government's aim make the country's economy a $5 trillion one by 2024.

In an address at the 11th edition of DefExpo in Lucknow in February, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said lack of proper policy initiative in last several decades made India the biggest importer of defence platforms and that his government has taken a series of initiative­s to cut the country's dependence on foreign acquisitio­ns.

◗ THE DRAFT defence policy set an export target of `35,000 crore in aerospace and defence goods and services in the next 5 years, which has been estimated as part of the total projected turnover

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