Key Points

NITI Aayog is spearheading a transformative approach to India's research and development landscape, targeting bureaucratic inefficiencies in government-funded institutions. Dr. V.K. Saraswat is leading an ambitious initiative to create more dynamic, autonomous research ecosystems across the country. The strategy emphasizes decentralized decision-making, performance accountability, and creating flexible pathways for scientific careers. By focusing on strengthening institutional capacities and industry-academia partnerships, the plan aims to drive innovation and retain top scientific talent in Indian research institutions.

Key Points: NITI Aayog Drives R&D Reform with Saraswat's Innovation Vision

  • NITI Aayog launches comprehensive R&D ecosystem transformation strategy
  • Calls for decentralized decision-making in research institutions
  • Aims to strengthen industry-academia research partnerships
  • Focuses on retaining young scientific talent
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NITI Aayog stresses on reforms to speed up R&D in govt institutions

NITI Aayog member Dr. V.K. Saraswat leads critical initiative to transform government research institutions, emphasizing autonomy and innovation

"Scientific research must be unshackled from bureaucratic delays and rigid hierarchies - Dr. V.K. Saraswat"

New Delhi, June 4

NITI Aayog member Dr. V.K. Saraswat on Wednesday emphasised the critical need to transform India’s government-funded Research and Development (R&D) institutions into dynamic, autonomous, and mission-driven ecosystems

New Delhi, June 4 (IANS) NITI Aayog member Dr. V.K. Saraswat on Wednesday emphasised the critical need to transform India’s government-funded Research and Development (R&D) institutions into dynamic, autonomous, and mission-driven ecosystems Addressing the inaugural session of the two-day consultative meeting on reforming India’s R&D ecosystem in Dehradun, Saraswat stressed that scientific research must be unshackled from bureaucratic delays and rigid hierarchies and instead be empowered through decentralized decision-making, timely funding, and performance-based accountability.

Dr Saraswat also reiterated NITI Aayog’s commitment to driving systemic reform through continuous engagement with stakeholders and evidence-based policy recommendations.

This ongoing initiative by NITI Aayog aims to enable a forward-looking, innovation-driven, and resilient research ecosystem in the country, with a particular focus on strengthening the capacities of government-funded R&D institutions and laboratories.

Dr. N. Kalaiselvi, Director General, CSIR and Secretary, DSIR, commended NITI Aayog’s leadership in convening this much-needed dialogue and emphasized the importance of collaborative governance in resolving long-standing structural issues.

She highlighted the need to rejuvenate R&D infrastructure, particularly in tier 2 and tier 3 institutions, and to strengthen industry-academia partnerships to foster impactful translational research. Dr. Kalaiselvi also spoke about the significance of aligning national scientific efforts with local innovation needs.

Professor Ashutosh Sharma, President, Indian National Science Academy (INSA), drew attention to the human dimension of science, calling for greater trust in researchers, reduced micromanagement, and the creation of flexible pathways for scientific careers. He underscored the urgency of retaining young talent in Indian institutions through better opportunities, mentorship, and global exposure.

The meeting, currently underway, will discuss themes such as institutional governance, researcher mobility, translational research, and enhancing public-private collaboration.

Organised under the Chairpersonship of Dr. V.K. Saraswat, Member, NITI Aayog, the two-day meeting builds upon the outcomes of the first consultative dialogue held in May 2025 at Raj Bhawan, Lucknow, and marks the second installment in a series of regional meetings planned to address systemic challenges in India’s research and development ecosystem.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally some focus on R&D reforms! Our scientists are brilliant but stuck in bureaucratic red tape. Hope this leads to real change - we're losing too many talented researchers to foreign institutions. More autonomy + faster funding = better innovation 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
Good initiative but will it translate to ground reality? Every govt talks about R&D reforms but our labs still use 20-year-old equipment. Need urgent infrastructure upgrades, especially in smaller cities. Also, why only 2-day meetings? Should be continuous action plan!
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Arjun S.
As someone working in a govt research lab, I can confirm the hierarchy problem is real! Junior scientists have great ideas but no platform. Hope this 'mission-driven ecosystem' means actual meritocracy. Also pls fix the 6-month delay in equipment procurement process 😅
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Shweta R.
Industry-academia partnership is the key! Our IITs produce amazing research but very little reaches market. More startups should get access to govt lab facilities. Make in India needs strong R&D backbone 💡
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Vikram J.
While the intent is good, I'm skeptical. Same issues were raised 10 years ago in the Science, Technology and Innovation Policy. Unless there's budget allocation and quarterly progress reports, this will remain another chai-biscuit discussion. Prove me wrong, NITI Aayog!
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Neha T.
Focus on tier 2/3 institutions is crucial! Metro cities get all the funding while excellent regional universities struggle. Also need better science communication - public should understand why R&D matters. Maybe ISRO-style outreach for other fields too? 🚀

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