Key Points

India has officially assumed the chairmanship of the Asian Productivity Organization for the 2025-26 term during the 67th Governing Body Meeting in Indonesia. The country pledged to advance APO Vision 2030, focusing on digital transformation, sustainability, and innovation across the Asia-Pacific region. With over 100 Indian professionals participating annually in APO initiatives, the country aims to drive productivity improvements in industrial, services, and agricultural sectors. As a founding member, India continues to play a crucial role in shaping the organization's strategic direction and collaborative development efforts.

Key Points: India Leads Asian Productivity Organization 2025-26 Term

  • India takes leadership of 21-nation Asian Productivity Organization
  • Emphasizes Green Productivity and digital transformation
  • Commits to inclusive regional development programs
  • Supports capacity-building initiatives across sectors
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India takes over chairmanship of 21-nation Asian Productivity Organization

India assumes APO chairmanship, commits to Green Productivity 2.0 and regional collaboration in transformative development initiatives

"We aim to drive digital transformation and sustainable innovation - Amardeep Singh Bhatia, APO Director for India"

Jakarta, May 21

India has formally assumed the Chairmanship of the 21-nation Asian Productivity Organization (APO) for the 2025–26 term during the ongoing 67th Session of the Governing Body Meeting of the APO, being held from May 20-22 in Indonesia's capital city.

As Chair of the APO, India reiterated its commitment to advancing the APO Vision 2030 and expanding the Green Productivity 2.0 framework. India emphasized the importance of regional collaboration in driving digital transformation, sustainability, innovation, and entrepreneurship.

It also expressed its intent to contribute to inclusive, responsive, and results-driven APO programs that address evolving productivity and development challenges in the Asia-Pacific region.

The Indian delegation is led by Secretary, Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), and APO Director for India, Amardeep Singh Bhatia.

Each year, over 100 Indian professionals participate in APO-led capacity-building initiatives through the National Productivity Council (NPC) under DPIIT.

These programmes contribute significantly to productivity improvements in India's industrial, services, and agricultural sectors. Several demonstration projects, including those focused on Green Productivity and Industry 4.0 applications for MSMEs, have also been implemented across the country.

The Governing Body is the APO's highest decision-making authority and meets annually to set the organisation's strategic direction, approve major proposals, and review Secretariat performance. The 67th GBM is being hosted by the Government of Indonesia.

Established in 1961, the Asian Productivity Organization is a Tokyo-based intergovernmental body that promotes productivity enhancement across the Asia-Pacific region through mutual cooperation and capacity building.

The APO currently comprises 21 member economies, including Bangladesh, Cambodia, Taiwan, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, among others.

As one of its founding members, India has played a pivotal role in shaping the organisation’s vision and supporting its initiatives.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
This is a proud moment for India! 🇮🇳 Leading APO shows our growing influence in Asia's economic development. Hope we can use this platform to share our digital transformation success stories with neighbors like Nepal and Bangladesh.
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Priya M.
Green Productivity 2.0 sounds promising. India should take lead in sustainable development, especially when working with countries facing climate challenges like Pakistan and Bangladesh. But implementation is key - hope this isn't just another talk shop.
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Amit S.
Good opportunity to strengthen ties with Southeast Asian nations through productivity initiatives. Maybe we can learn from Japan's tech expertise while sharing our IT capabilities. Win-win for all APO members!
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Sunita R.
Hope our MSME sector benefits from this. Small businesses need more exposure to international best practices. The Industry 4.0 projects mentioned could be game-changers if properly implemented at grassroots level.
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Vikram J.
Interesting to see both India and Pakistan in same organization. Maybe productivity cooperation can build bridges where politics fails. At least we agree on economic development goals!
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Neha P.
While this is good news, I hope our focus remains on domestic productivity too. We have many challenges in agriculture and manufacturing that need attention. International recognition is great, but ground reality matters more.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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