GS 3: EconomyGS 2: GovernanceGS 3: Science & Technology

Unlocking innovation with India’s procurement reforms, Pg8

India's procurement reforms, exempting GeM and enhancing R&D thresholds, aim to catalyse innovation by prioritising scientific needs over procedural compliance.

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Key Highlights:

  • India has recently reformed its General Financial Rules (GFR), including exemptions from the Government e-Marketplace (GeM) portal.
  • The reforms also enhanced financial thresholds for research and development (R&D) procurement.
  • These changes aim to prioritize scientific needs over procedural compliance in procurement.
  • Institutional heads can now bypass GeM for specialized equipment and have increased direct purchase limits.
  • Approval for global tenders up to ₹200 crore is now delegated to vice-chancellors and directors.

Detailed Insights:

  • Public procurement, when properly executed, can stimulate private-sector R&D by creating demand for advanced technologies.
  • The reforms address issues where mandatory GeM purchases forced scientists into time-consuming exemption processes for specialized tools.
  • The policy changes align with theories of “catalytic procurement”, enabling public institutions to act as early adopters of advanced technologies.
  • While empowering institutional leaders, safeguards such as departmental purchase committees for higher-value acquisitions are retained.
  • Nations leading in R&D outcomes reimagine procurement as a catalyst for innovation, not just a cost-control mechanism.
  • Cognitive procurement, using tools like generative AI, can analyze supplier ecosystems and automate compliance, freeing researchers.
  • Systemic shifts such as outcome-weighted tenders, sandbox exemptions, AI-augmented sourcing, and co-procurement alliances could deepen change.

Key Concepts Involved:

  • Procurement: The acquisition of goods, services, or works from an external source.
  • R&D (Research and Development): Activities undertaken to improve existing products and procedures, or to create new products and procedures.
  • GFR (General Financial Rules): A set of rules and regulations in India that govern financial matters and procurement by government entities.
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