MoSPI’s Framework for India’s Knowledge Economy

Syllabus: GS3/Economy

Context

  • The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) is inviting feedback and suggestions on the Base Paper on Framework for Measuring the Contribution of Knowledge and Knowledge Products to the Indian Economy.
    • MoSPI constituted a Committee on Knowledge Systems under the chairmanship of Ratan P. Watal.

What Is the Knowledge Economy?

  • A knowledge economy is one where human capital like skills, information, innovation, and intellectual property drives growth, rather than physical inputs or natural resources.
  • It operates on two types of knowledge:
    • Codified Knowledge: Documented, transmittable (know-what, know-why) like  patents, software, academic research.
    • Tacit Knowledge: Experience-based, harder to transfer (know-how, know-who) like artisanal skills, traditional medicine.
  • In major OECD economies, knowledge-based activities contribute over 50% of GDP.
  • India’s IT sector, start-up ecosystem, pharmaceutical R&D, and traditional knowledge systems are all part of this, yet remain invisible in standard national accounts.

Why is this Framework Needed?

  • Limitations of Traditional Methods: Traditional GDP estimation methods mainly measure the value of tangible economic activities such as manufacturing, agriculture, construction, and physical infrastructure.
    • Existing statistical systems do not adequately capture the value generated by knowledge-based activities.
  • Gross Domestic Knowledge Product (GDKP): GDKP is a complementary metric to GDP that measures the economic value of a country’s knowledge production and use.
  • It captures four dimensions of knowledge in an economy.
    • Knowledge Items like tangible (books, computers, journals) and intangible (online courses, patents, training programmes)
    • Knowledge Producers means universities, R&D labs, think tanks, innovators
    • Knowledge Distributors like media, digital platforms, publishing houses
    • Knowledge Users are consumers, industries, and governments.

Major Highlights of the Paper

  • Modern Knowledge Products: It identifies software, algorithms, databases, AI systems, and digital content as important modern knowledge products.
    • It includes patents, copyrights, trademarks, and industrial designs under intellectual property products.
    • Scientific publications, technological innovations, and research outputs are also treated as knowledge products.
  • Valuable Knowledge Assets: Traditional knowledge systems, indigenous medicinal practices, and GI-tagged products are recognized as economically valuable knowledge assets.
    • It highlights systems such as Ayurveda, traditional medicine, tribal knowledge, local agricultural techniques, and Geographical Indications (GIs).
  • One of the most important proposals in the paper is the concept of “Effective R&D Capital Stock.”
    • The framework proposes treating expenditure on research and development as a form of capital formation similar to investment in physical infrastructure.
  • Valuation Framework: It attempts to develop a broad valuation framework for integrating knowledge products into national accounting systems.

Why Does This Matter for India?

  • India is targeting a $10 trillion GDP by 2034 and Viksit Bharat by 2047 and both aspirations are fundamentally knowledge-driven.
  • India’s demographic dividend, the largest working-age population in the world, can only be converted into economic value through knowledge and skills, not just numbers.
  • Sectors like IT services, pharmaceuticals, space technology, AI, and start-ups are already major contributors to growth but remain under-measured in national accounts.
  • India’s vast traditional knowledge heritage like Ayurveda, indigenous seed varieties, craft traditions, folk technologies has significant economic value that is entirely uncaptured today.
  • Knowing the true size and structure of the knowledge economy enables better policies on R&D spending, IP protection, education investment, and digital infrastructure.

Challenges Identified by the Framework

  • Absence of Global Standards: Currently there is no universally accepted international framework for measuring the contribution of knowledge economies.
  • Data Gaps: The framework identifies major data deficiencies regarding AI adoption, innovation diffusion, digital assets, and informal innovation systems.
    • Reliable statistical data on knowledge-based economic activities is still limited in many sectors.
  • Difficulty in Valuation: Intangible assets are difficult to price because they often do not have clear market values.
  • Rapid Obsolescence of Knowledge: The framework recognizes that technological change can quickly reduce the economic value of existing knowledge products.
  • Challenges in Measuring Spillover Effects: The paper notes that innovations often indirectly improve productivity in unrelated sectors, making spillover effects difficult to quantify statistically.

Conclusion

  • The MoSPI framework represents an important shift in economic thinking by recognizing knowledge, innovation, and intangible assets as major drivers of economic growth.
  • If successfully implemented, the framework could significantly improve India’s ability to measure innovation-led growth and support its transition toward becoming a global knowledge economy.

Source: AIR

 
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