Defence Budget Expansion

Syllabus: Security challenges and their management.

Context: Rising Defence Allocation

  • Union Budget marks first double-digit rise in defence spending in decades.
  • Defence outlay now stands near 2% of GDP, signalling strategic resolve.
  • Increase reflects growing geopolitical instability and security pressures.
  • Funds require faster utilisation through systemic process reforms.

Key Budget Highlights

  • Capital vs Revenue Shift
    • Capital expenditure rose over 22%, reversing years of underinvestment.
    • Modernisation now prioritised over routine revenue spending.
    • Shift indicates long-term military capability focus.
  • Service-wise Allocations
    • Indian Air Force received nearly 32% budget increase.
    • Indian Army saw 30% hike for vehicles and weapons.
    • Indian Navy allocation rose marginally by about 3%. Lower naval rise linked to strong indigenisation capacity.

External and Financial Pressures

  • Rupee depreciation raises cost of imported defence platforms.
  • Aircraft and capital procurements become more expensive.
  • However, defence exports reached ₹23,000 crore, up from ₹1,000 crore in 2014.
  • Domestic firms produce mobility systems and logistics platforms.

Pension and Structural Cost Concerns

  • Defence pensions rose by 6.56% in recent estimates.
  • Pension share stands at 21.84% of defence budget.
  • Earlier, pensions were outside defence accounting framework.
  • Suggestion raised to revisit this earlier budgeting model.

Indigenisation and Procurement Reforms

  • 75% of capital procurement reserved for domestic industry.
  • Defence production increased by 174% since 2014-15.
  • Policy supports private sector participation.
  • Yet, procurement processes remain bureaucratically complex.

L-1 Rule Challenges

  • Lowest-cost rule disadvantages innovation-driven firms.
  • Start-ups struggle transitioning from design to manufacturing.
  • Requires assured orders and long-term planning clarity.

Delays and Fund Utilisation Issues

  • Project-75 submarine programme delayed since 1997 approval.
  • Deliveries expected only by mid-2030s.
  • Rafale acquisition conceived in 1990s, delivered post-2019.
  • ₹12,500 crore capital funds returned unspent in FY2024-25.

Need for Financial Mechanism Reform

  • Proposal to revive Non-Lapsable Defence Modernisation Fund.
  • Announced earlier but never operationalised.
  • Would prevent modernisation funds from lapsing annually.

Research & Development Gaps

  • DRDO and defence research funding increased.
  • Research ecosystem remains fragmented.
  • Dual-use innovations rarely translate into defence capability.
  • India’s R&D spending only 0.66% of GDP.
  • Private sector research participation remains limited.

Defence Spending and Development Linkages

  • Defence must not be viewed through “guns vs butter” lens.
  • Infrastructure projects aid border development.
  • Indigenous shipbuilding generates strong employment multipliers.
  • Defence investment can support Viksit Bharat growth vision.

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