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BackIndia's Defence Output Sees Record High, Private Sector Contribution Grows
India's Defence Output Sees Record High, Private Sector Contribution Grows
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SCMP Economy6/24/2026Defense1 min readChina

India's Defence Output Sees Record High, Private Sector Contribution Grows

Quick Look

  • India's defence output hit a record $18.7 billion in FY 2025-26, with the private sector contributing 24% ($4.4 billion).
  • This marks a shift from state dominance, with private firms increasing involvement in drones, surveillance, and components.
  • However, experts note private firms still complement, not replace, state manufacturers in critical technology areas.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

India's defence sector is undergoing a transformation, with the private sector's contribution to defence output increasing significantly. This shift aims to reduce reliance on state-owned entities and foreign suppliers.

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In the 2025-26 financial year, the private sector accounted for 24 per cent of India’s defence output, or US$4.4 billion out of a record US$18.7 billion, according to a defence ministry statement released last week.

The figures reflect a gradual shift away from a sector long dominated by state-owned manufacturers, with private firms contributing more to drones, surveillance systems, ammunition and components.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh hailed the record output on social media, attributing it to “sustained policy support, several new initiatives, increased private sector participation and growing export capabilities”.

Yet the headline numbers do not tell the full story, according to Rahul Wankhede, a research analyst at the Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses in New Delhi, who said private companies were still complementing, rather than displacing, state-owned manufacturers.

“India’s armed forces need everything from basic equipment and components to highly complex systems such as aero-engines, advanced sensors, missiles, aircraft and submarines. In many of these critical technology areas, India still depends either on the public sector, DRDO-led development, foreign technology collaboration or a combination of all three,” he said, adding that it would be premature to suggest private firms could meet the full spectrum of military requirements.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Private sector's share in defence output will continue to grow.

    Likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • Can private firms fully meet all military requirements?
  • What is the timeline for reducing foreign technology dependence?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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