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Article
09 Apr 2026

The Other Side of Sport — Mastering Manufacturing

Context:

  • Sports in India are expanding beyond cricket, with athletes like Neeraj Chopra and Lakshya Sen highlighting growing diversity.
  • The sports ecosystem includes not just athletes and viewership but also sports goods manufacturing, an important yet often overlooked sector.
  • This sector is labour-intensive and plays a key role in the economics of sport.
  • A report by NITI Aayog and the Foundation for Economic Development (FED) titled “Realising the export potential of the sports equipment manufacturing market in India” examines this sector.
  • Despite strong cultural engagement with sports, India contributes only 0.5% to the $50 billion global sports equipment trade.
  • This gap is due not to lack of capability, but structural issues limiting the sector’s growth potential.
  • This article highlights the overlooked role of sports goods manufacturing in India’s sports ecosystem, examining structural challenges, cost disadvantages, and policy gaps while outlining strategies to unlock its global export potential.

India’s Sports Equipment Industry: Diversity and Challenges

  • Concentrated Yet Fragmented Manufacturing Base
    • India’s sports equipment manufacturing is geographically concentrated in centres like Jalandhar and Meerut, which account for over 80% of output.
    • The sector is dominated by MSMEs engaged in labour-intensive production, which sustains traditional skills but limits scalability, technology adoption, and global brand development.
  • High Product Diversity and Policy Challenges
    • The industry is highly diverse, with different sports equipment requiring distinct raw materials, machinery, and techniques.
    • This diversity complicates policy design, often resulting in generic measures that fail to address category-specific needs.
  • Cost Disadvantage and Competitiveness Issues
    • Indian manufacturers face an average 15% cost disadvantage compared to competitors like China and Pakistan.
    • Higher input costs, inefficient logistics, and lack of scale reduce export competitiveness and weaken pricing power in global markets.

Core Issues in India’s Sports Equipment Industry

  • Limited Access to Advanced Inputs and Technology
    • High-performance sports equipment requires specialised materials and precision tools, many of which are not produced domestically or are available only at small scale.
    • Import duties on these inputs and advanced machinery raise production costs, making it difficult for MSMEs to invest in technology upgrades and diversify products.
  • Structural and Logistical Constraints
    • Manufacturing is concentrated in northern India, increasing logistics costs for exports through distant ports.
    • Rising land prices, fragmented infrastructure, and regulatory delays further reduce efficiency, disproportionately affecting financially weaker firms.
  • Certification and Compliance Barriers
    • Global markets demand strict quality standards, but India lacks sufficient certified facilities.
    • Manufacturers rely on expensive European testing labs, with costs ranging from ₹5 lakh to ₹50 lakh per stock keeping unit (SKU).
    • Lengthy certification processes delay market entry and hinder innovation.
  • Weak Demand and Branding Challenges
    • India has struggled to build globally recognised sports brands beyond cricket.
    • Limited marketing, few international partnerships, and lack of athlete-brand linkages restrict global demand.
    • As a result, firms remain focused on low-value contract manufacturing instead of developing their own brands.

Reform, Support, Upgrade: Pathway for India’s Sports Equipment Industry

  • Policy Reforms and Fiscal Support
    • Addressing sectoral challenges requires rationalising import duties on specialised inputs and machinery to improve competitiveness.
    • The report recommends targeted fiscal support, including export incentives, assistance with certification costs, and support for participation in global trade platforms.
  • Leveraging Industrial Strengths for Upgradation
    • India can utilise its strengths in technical textiles, footwear, plastics, and light engineering to upgrade sports goods manufacturing.
    • This can help scale production, adopt new technologies, and shift towards high-value, performance-oriented equipment.
  • Building Testing and Certification Infrastructure
    • Establishing internationally recognised testing and certification centres is essential to reduce compliance costs, speed up product launches, and position India as a standards-setting player.
  • Strengthening Domestic Supply Chains and Branding
    • Investing in local production of advanced materials like composites and performance fabrics can reduce import dependence.
    • Simultaneously, developing strong domestic brands through coordinated efforts involving athletes, federations, and government is crucial.
  • Demand Creation and Strategic Opportunities
    • Strategic procurement linked to upcoming international sporting events can boost short-term demand and promote Indian products globally.
    • A shift from contract manufacturing to brand ownership is necessary for long-term growth.
  • Opportunity for Transformation
    • With rising domestic sports participation, changing global supply chains, and opportunities from hosting major events, India has the potential to transform into a global leader.
    • Achieving this requires a strategic and well-executed transition to large-scale, advanced manufacturing.

Conclusion

  • India’s sports manufacturing sector holds strong potential, but realising it requires structural reforms, technological upgrades, and strategic branding to move from low-value production to global leadership.
Editorial Analysis

Article
09 Apr 2026

Land Inequality in India - Distribution, Patterns and Key Findings

Why in the News?

  • A recent study by the World Inequality Lab highlights significant land concentration in rural India.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Land Distribution in India (Background, Land Inequality)
  • News Summary (Key Highlights of the Report)

Land Distribution in India

  • Land ownership in India, particularly in rural areas, has historically been unequal due to colonial land systems, socio-economic hierarchies, and agrarian structures.
  • Despite land reforms after independence, disparities persist in ownership patterns. Land is a crucial asset in rural India as it determines income, social status, and access to credit.
  • Broadly, land distribution can be classified into:
    • Large landholders controlling significant agricultural land.
    • Small and marginal farmers owning limited land.
    • Landless households dependent on wage labour.
  • This unequal distribution has direct implications for poverty, agricultural productivity, and rural development.

Key Features of Land Inequality

  • Land inequality in India is measured using indicators such as land share concentration and the Gini coefficient.
  • The Gini coefficient reflects inequality, where a higher value indicates greater disparity.
  • Major features include:
    • High concentration of land among a small percentage of households.
    • Large proportion of rural households being landless.
    • Regional variations influenced by historical and institutional factors.

News Summary

  • As per a recent study, the top 10% of rural households in India own 44% of total land, while about 46% of rural households are landless.
  • The study, based on data from the Socio-Economic Caste Census (2011), covered around 650 million individuals across 270,000 villages in major Indian states.
  • The concentration is even sharper at higher levels, with the top 5% owning 32% and the top 1% owning 18% of total land.
  • State-wise analysis shows wide variation. Bihar records the highest land concentration, with the top household owning up to 20.1% of land, while Uttar Pradesh shows relatively lower concentration at 7.3%.
  • Punjab has the highest landlessness at 73%, despite being an agriculturally advanced state. Meanwhile, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh show relatively lower levels of landlessness compared to Bihar and Madhya Pradesh.
  • The Gini coefficient analysis reveals that Kerala has the highest inequality (around 90), followed by Bihar, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal. Karnataka and Rajasthan have comparatively lower inequality levels.
  • The study notes that although 46% of households are landless, among those owning land, the average landholding size is 6.2 hectares. A significant portion of land is concentrated in small holdings, but control remains skewed.
  • The largest landholder in a village controls about 12.4% of land on average, and in nearly 3.8% of villages, a single landlord owns more than half of the land.
  • The report also identifies key drivers of inequality. Agricultural suitability and market access together explain about 18.3% of the variation in land inequality. Areas with better agro-ecological conditions tend to have higher land concentration.
  • Social factors also play a role. Regions with higher Scheduled Caste populations exhibit higher inequality due to increased landlessness.
  • Proximity to infrastructure such as towns, highways, and railway stations is associated with higher inequality, indicating that development alone does not automatically reduce disparities.
  • Historical factors remain crucial. Areas under the zamindari system show higher inequality, while former princely states have relatively lower inequality due to lower landlessness.

Implications of Land Inequality

  • Persistent land inequality has wide-ranging consequences.
    • It reinforces rural poverty and limits upward mobility.
    • It affects agricultural productivity due to fragmented holdings and unequal access to resources.
    • It creates social tensions and deepens caste-based disparities.
  • Further, high landlessness reduces access to institutional credit and government benefits, thereby perpetuating economic exclusion.

Way Forward

  • Addressing land inequality requires a multi-pronged approach.
    • Strengthening land reforms and tenancy rights.
    • Digitisation and transparency in land records.
    • Promoting cooperative farming and land pooling.
    • Enhancing access to credit and agricultural inputs for small farmers.
  • Policy focus should also include social equity and targeted interventions for vulnerable communities.

 

Economics

Article
09 Apr 2026

West Asia Crisis - Emerging Great Power Contest and its Implications for India

Context:

  • The interim cessation of hostilities in West Asia has raised hopes for restoring global flows of energy, trade, capital, and mobility.
  • However, the conflict has deepened a global polycrisis—marked by United Nations Security Council (UNSC) paralysis, rising stagflation risks, and 363 million people slipping into food insecurity.
  • Simultaneously, West Asia has become a key arena of US–China great power competition, reshaping the global order.

US Strategy - Reordering the Global Balance of Power:

  • Key features:
    • Forced re-hemisphering (rooted in the Monroe Doctrine): The war in West Asia, pressures against Latin American nations like Cuba, and circumscribing security guarantees.
    • Recalibration of global norms: Tariffs on over 70 nations, withdrawal from 66 international organisations and treaties, and resource colonisation.
    • Power projection in various theatres: Kinetic action in India’s strategic backyard, the Russia-Ukraine war, and an enhanced $1.5 trillion military budget.
    • Political engineering: Support for populist-autocratic to effect regime changes.
  • Strategic objective: Each disruption frees American resources for the Indo-Pacific theatre to counter China.

Energy Geopolitics - Weaponisation of Supply Chains:

  • US approach:
    • The global energy crisis was partly engineered to choke China’s supply lines by targeting Venezuela and Iran, two of China’s petro-state partners.
    • Similarly,
      • The damage caused to 40 energy assets across West Asia,
      • The Strait of Hormuz blockade (taking 8-10 million barrels per-day),
      • The lack of alternative routes (Houthi blockades at Bab el-Mandeb), and
      • Port terminal strikes.
  • US gains:
    • A 40% drop in Russian oil exports, benefiting the US.
    • The US leveraged domestic natural gas reserves, and access to Venezuelan resources.
    • It secured a $750 billion energy export deal with Europe.

China’s Resilience - Energy Security and Diversification:

  • Key strengths:
    • Vast reserves: 1.4 billion barrels of oil, and LNG reserves of 60 billion cubic metres.
    • Energy mix: 34.7% from renewables (solar, wind, and hydro).
    • Strong pipeline diplomacy: The Kazakhstan-China oil pipeline, Russia's ESPO pipeline, and the Turkmenistan-China gas pipeline.
    • Continued imports: For instance, 1.5 million barrels/day from Iran.
    • Future push: China’s 15th Five Year Plan promises to add 46 GW through nuclear power.
  • Key takeaways: China remains largely insulated from engineered energy shocks due to diversification and long-term planning.

Currency Geopolitics - Dollar vs Yuan:

  • US actions:
    • Operation Absolute Resolve: It was partly designed to curb Venezuelan plans to “free itself from the dollar” (by trading in non-dollar currencies).
    • Operation Epic Fury: Target Iran’s non-dollar trade and signal to others (e.g., Saudi Arabia).
  • Outcomes:
    • Limited success: Due to Iran’s strategy to shift oil trade settlement to yuan.
    • Global trends: Rise in yuan-denominated trade (now >50% of China’s trade), decline in US dollar share in global reserves, and increased gold stockpiling and reduced US Treasury holdings.
  • Constraints on Yuan: Lack of global trust in China’s financial system.
  • Implication: Slow but steady erosion of dollar dominance, though not immediate replacement.

Structural Challenges for the Global Order:

  • Breakdown of multilateralism (UNSC ineffectiveness).
  • Rise of geo-economic fragmentation.
  • Increasing energy insecurity.
  • Weaponisation of trade and finance.
  • Growing food insecurity and inequality.

Implications for India:

  • Opportunities: High “Nelson Complexity Index” refineries can process heavy crude (e.g., Venezuelan oil), and can potentially emerge as a refining hub.
  • Risks: Overdependence on the US for strategic balancing against China, energy security, and exposure to global supply chain shocks.

Way Forward for India:

  • Strategic autonomy: Avoid excessive alignment with any one bloc (especially the US).
  • Energy security: Expand Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR); diversify energy imports; and scale up renewable energy (solar, wind), and nuclear energy capacity.
  • Diplomatic reset: Rebuild ties with extended neighbourhoods (West Asia, Central Asia, Africa), and adopt multi-alignment strategy.
  • Domestic political consensus: Involve Opposition in foreign policy formulation. Avoid politicisation of foreign policy for electoral gains.

Conclusion:

  • The West Asia crisis underscores the emergence of a fragmented, competitive global order defined by great power rivalry, energy geopolitics, and currency contestation.
  • For India, navigating this landscape requires a careful balance of strategic autonomy, energy resilience, and diplomatic pragmatism.
  • A unified national approach will be crucial to leverage opportunities while mitigating risks in this evolving world order.
Editorial Analysis

Article
09 Apr 2026

Jan Vishwas 2.0 is All About Trust-Based Compliance

Context

  • The passage of the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 marks a significant milestone in India’s regulatory evolution.
  • It reflects a deliberate and forward-looking policy shift from punitive enforcement toward facilitative governance.
  • By embedding trust, proportionality, and efficiency into the compliance framework, the reform signals a departure from the historical over-reliance on criminal sanctions and aligns India’s regulatory philosophy with contemporary economic needs.

Key Features of Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026

  • From Criminalisation to Facilitation
    • In recent years, India’s reform agenda has increasingly focused on the decriminalisation of minor business-related offences.
    • Excessive criminalisation, particularly of technical and procedural lapses such as delays in filings or clerical errors, had created a climate of compliance anxiety.
    • This not only discouraged entrepreneurship but also diverted judicial and administrative resources away from serious offences.
    • The Jan Vishwas framework addresses this imbalance by promoting voluntary compliance over fear-driven adherence.
    • It recognises that most procedural violations lack malicious intent and are better addressed through civil penalties or administrative mechanisms rather than criminal prosecution.
  • A Continuum of Reform
    • The 2026 Bill builds upon the foundation laid by the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2023, which decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 Central Acts.
    • This earlier reform significantly reduced compliance burdens and improved both the ease of doing business and the ease of living.
    • Expanding this trajectory, the 2026 legislation, often referred to as Jan Vishwas 2.0, proposes amendments to 784 provisions across 79 Central Acts, with 717 provisions being decriminalised.
    • This scale of reform underscores a systematic effort to rationalise the statute book by eliminating obsolete provisions and enhancing regulatory coherence.
  • Stakeholder Engagement and Policy Design
    • Sustained engagement between government, industry bodies, and experts has ensured that decriminalisation does not dilute regulatory objectives.
    • Organisations such as the Confederation of Indian Industry have played a crucial role in shaping the policy by highlighting the disproportionate nature of criminal liability for minor infractions.
    • The advocacy extended beyond decriminalisation to structural reforms, including the transition from court-imposed fines to administrative penalties.
    • This shift introduces greater predictability, proportionality, and efficiency in enforcement, while also enabling time-bound resolution of cases.
  • Toward Trust-Based Governance
    • The Bill also introduces mechanisms such as improvement notices and proportionate penalties, reinforcing the principle of trust-based regulation.
    • This approach acknowledges that compliance is more effectively achieved in an environment that is transparent, predictable, and
    • However, the success of this ambitious reform will depend on its implementation.
    • Strengthening institutional capacity, ensuring uniform enforcement, and providing clear guidance to stakeholders will be critical in translating legislative intent into practical outcomes.

The Core of the Jan Vishwas 2.0: A Paradigm Shift in Regulatory Philosophy

  • At its core, the Jan Vishwas 2.0 represents a philosophical transformation in governance.
  • It moves from a regime rooted in suspicion and punishment to one based on trust and economic rationality.
  • Importantly, the reform maintains stringent penalties for serious offences involving public safety, environmental protection, and national priorities, thereby preserving the integrity of enforcement.
  • The introduction of graded enforcement mechanisms, such as warnings and reduced penalties for first-time violations, further reflects a nuanced understanding of compliance behaviour.
  • This is particularly beneficial for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which often face disproportionate compliance burdens.

Implications for the Judiciary

  • One of the most immediate and tangible benefits of the reform is its potential to reduce judicial backlog.
  • With nearly 50 million cases pending in Indian courts, many involving minor procedural violations, the decriminalisation of such offences can significantly ease court congestion.
  • By shifting these matters to administrative adjudication, the reform allows courts to focus on more serious cases, thereby improving overall judicial efficiency.

Conclusion

  • The Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 represents a decisive step toward modernising India’s regulatory framework.
  • By prioritising trust, proportionality, and economic efficiency, it will create a more conducive environment for business and governance alike.
  • Ultimately, the reform reinforces a fundamental principle: sustainable compliance is best achieved not through coercion, but through clarity, fairness, and trust.
Editorial Analysis

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09 Apr 2026

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09 Apr 2026

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09 Apr 2026

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09 Apr 2026

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09 Apr 2026

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09 Apr 2026

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