India is embarking on an ambitious journey to triple its annual goods exports to over $1 trillion by 2035. Moving away from the heavy-subsidy models of the past, the government’s third major manufacturing push — the National Manufacturing Mission —will prioritize structural reforms and regulatory ease over government spending.
While previous initiatives such as “Make in India” and various multibillion-dollar incentive packages saw only incremental success, government officials acknowledge that those efforts failed to hit the target of manufacturing representing 25% of the GDP.
This new strategy identifies 15 key sectors, spanning from high-tech semiconductor fabrication and energy storage to labor-intensive industries such as leather and metals.
The financial commitment for this mission is notably leaner than its predecessors. The government plans to allocate approximately $1 billion to develop infrastructure for 30 manufacturing hubs, with an additional $218 million in grants for advanced technology fields. Rather than offering broad, pre-budget incentive packages, financial support will now be determined on a case-by-case basis by a specialized government panel.

The core of this mission lies in cutting red tape. The new high-level panel, chaired by a federal minister, is designed to bypass traditional bureaucratic bottlenecks. Its primary goals include:
Accelerating Approvals: Speeding up land acquisition and regulatory clearances.
Inter-State Coordination: Harmonizing divergent labor laws and permit requirements across different states to lower operational costs.
Infrastructure Synergy: Selecting manufacturing sites based on proximity to ports and ensuring a reliable, affordable power supply through state cooperation.
Policy Alignment: Reducing overlapping quality checks and aligning tariffs with national industrial priorities.
By shifting the focus from “subsidy-driven” to “reform-led”, India aims to create a more agile and globally competitive ecosystem. This strategy treats regulatory compliance as the primary hurdle to overcome, and relies on a streamlined business environment to do more to attract long-term investment than temporary financial handouts. More granular details of this framework are expected to be unveiled during the Federal Budget that is due on February 1.
By focusing on the “soft” infrastructure of business (permits, labor laws, and state-level coordination), the government hopes to unlock the efficiency needed to reach the $1.3 trillion export milestone.
