“Make Your Line Longer”: India’s Tech Vision for Global Leadership
Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw unveils India’s strategy to become a global technology powerhouse through semiconductors, AI democratization, and startup innovation
In a sweeping address at the Bloomberg New Economy Forum, Union Minister for Electronics, IT, and Information & Broadcasting Shri Ashwini Vaishnaw articulated India’s comprehensive technology strategy, positioning the nation as a trusted partner in the global digital economy while charting an independent path toward technological self-reliance.
🇮🇳 India’s Technology Transformation at a Glance
“We should strengthen our line. We should make our line longer. We should make ourselves more stronger… rather than trying to reduce somebody else’s capabilities.”
— PM Narendra Modi’s guiding philosophy, as quoted by Minister Vaishnaw
🔬 The Semiconductor Revolution: From Skepticism to Success
When India launched its semiconductor mission in 2022, skeptics questioned whether the nation could compete in an industry dominated by established players with decades of head start. Minister Vaishnaw’s response at the Forum was emphatic: the results speak for themselves.
🏭 India Semiconductor Mission Progress (2022-2025)
The Minister highlighted a unique differentiator: 298 universities now have access to world’s latest semiconductor design tools—free for students. “Tell me which other country can say that they have 10 universities where students can design and tape out chips, actually fabricate a chip,” he challenged the audience.
“Capital will flow to the place where the right place to absorb that capital is. We are creating all those conditions.”
— Minister Vaishnaw on attracting global semiconductor investment
🤖 AI Democratization: Leveling the Global Playing Field
In a bold move to democratize artificial intelligence, India has established a common compute facility of 38,000 GPUs accessible to researchers and students at a fraction of global costs.
The Minister outlined India’s three-pronged AI strategy: participating in large language models for general applications, developing focused small models for specific industries, and—crucially—preparing Indian researchers for the next wave of AI innovation beyond current paradigms.
🚀 Startup Explosion: Unleashing Entrepreneurial Energy
📈 India’s Startup Journey: A Decade of Transformation
Minister Vaishnaw attributed this explosive growth to the removal of policy constraints that had “throttled” India’s entrepreneurial energy since 1950. With 1,500 laws removed from statute books, the simplification drive has unleashed a wave of innovation across sectors.
📱 The Techno-Legal Approach: Governing Social Media
Addressing one of the most pressing challenges in global governance, Minister Vaishnaw outlined India’s “techno-legal” approach to social media regulation—a framework that combines technological solutions with principles-based legislation.
⚠️ The Global Challenge
Deep fakes, synthetic content, and rumors amplified “at the speed of light” are breaking trust between institutions and citizens worldwide. The Minister noted that governments across the spectrum—from liberal to conservative—share this concern.
✅ India’s Solution: Principles-Based Data Protection
- Principles-based law that adapts as technology evolves quarterly
- Tilt toward innovation while separating harm
- Deep engagement with industry and civil society
- Expectation that platforms understand local social structures
“Every platform must understand the social structure of the country in which they are operating… Otherwise, there will be stronger regulations.”
— A clear message to global social media companies
💳 UPI: India’s Gift to the World
The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) exemplifies India’s approach to technology diplomacy—offering breakthrough innovations as open architecture to the global community rather than commercial products.
🌏 UPI’s International Journey
“We have given this as an open architecture to any country—rich, middle-income, or low-income.”
🏛️ The Four Pillars: India’s Growth Framework
Addressing the perennial question of how India maintains 6-8% growth with moderate inflation—especially post-pandemic—Minister Vaishnaw outlined the four foundational pillars:
Pillar 1: Infrastructure
Massive investment in social, digital, and physical infrastructure creating the backbone for growth
Pillar 2: Manufacturing & Innovation
Strong focus on building manufacturing capabilities and fostering innovation ecosystems
Pillar 3: Inclusive Growth
Ensuring the entire society grows together—no one left behind in India’s rise
Pillar 4: Simplification
1,500+ laws removed from statute books, unleashing entrepreneurial energy
🤝 Multi-Alignment: India as a Trusted Partner
In an era of “weaponized supply chains,” Minister Vaishnaw articulated India’s distinctive position: not neutrality, but multi-alignment based on trust. Addressing concerns about semiconductor supply chains, 5G/6G technology, and critical minerals, he emphasized that modern supply chains involve multiple players across geographies.
- Trusted Geography: Demonstrated respect for IP rights and co-development partnerships
- Indigenous Capability: Developed complete 4G/5G telecom stack with proprietary technology
- Win-Win Solutions: Focus on trust-based relationships with like-minded economies
- 5,000-Year Legacy: Commitment to continued contributions to human society
Looking Ahead: New Economy Forum 2025
The Minister concluded with an invitation: Bloomberg’s New Economy Forum will convene in New Delhi in October 2026—a testament to India’s emergence as a pivotal player in shaping the global digital economy. As Minister Vaishnaw noted, India offers what investors seek: stable policy, simplification, strong growth, and moderate inflation.
