* India’s pharmaceutical sector is improving cost efficiency through strong policy support and technology adoption. A government release dated February 2, 2026, announced the Biopharma SHAKTI initiative (Rs. 10,000 crore) to boost domestic biopharma capabilities, reduce import dependence, and enhance efficiency.
* Additionally, as of February 17, 2026, Indian drugmakers are increasingly using AI in R&D to lower costs and shorten drug development timelines, strengthening productivity and global competitiveness.
*The Economic Survey 2025-26 (January 29, 2026) notes India as the third-largest producer by volume, with exports reaching US$ 30.5 billion in FY25, supported by policy push, market diversification, and stronger manufacturing.
*In FY24 domestic consumption was valued at Rs. 2,01,372 crore (US$ 23.5 billion).
*The pharmaceutical industry’s total turnover stood at Rs. 2,25,000 crore (US$ 26.26 billion) in FY25 lead by cardiac, gastrointestinal and anti-diabetic segments.
*According to Mordor Intelligence, the Indian pharmaceutical market stood at Rs. 4,97,000 crore (US$ 57.61 billion) in 2025, is estimated at Rs. 5,20,000 crore (US$ 60.32 billion) in 2026 and is expected to grow to Rs. 6,89,000 crore (US$ 79.74 billion) by 2031, at a CAGR of 5.74%.
*PLI scheme: Rs. 15,000 crore (US$ 2.04 billion) outlay (2020-21 to 2028-29) to boost manufacturing, investment, and product diversification.
*On December 5, 2025, India announced a Rs. 60,000 crore (US$ 7 billion) API-push to boost domestic pharmaceutical manufacturing and cut import dependence.
*Under the Pradhan Mantri Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana, 16,912 Jan Aushadhi Kendras are operational as of June 30, 2025, with a target of 25,000 by March 2027, offering 2,110 medicines and 315 devices/consumables to promote affordable quality generic healthcare.
*Government disbursed Rs. 604 crore (US$ 69.76 million) under the PLI scheme in H1 FY25.
*The article (January 16, 2026) states that policy reforms like GST 2.0 and revised Schedule M are boosting efficiency and quality, supporting India’s pharma growth, with the sector expected to expand 7–9% in 2026.
*FDI policy: Up to 100% FDI allowed via automatic route for Greenfield pharma projects; up to 74% for Brownfield via automatic, beyond that with government approval.
*The Drugs & Pharmaceuticals sector received FDI inflow of Rs. 2,10,940 crore (US$ 24.62 billion) from April 2000-June 2025.
*Union Budget 2025-26: Allocation of Rs. 5,268 crore (US$ 602 million) for the Department of Pharmaceuticals, up 28.8% over previous budget estimates.
*The PIB press note dated February 02, 2026, announces Rs. 10,000 crore (US$ 1.08 billion) Biopharma SHAKTI investments to boost R&D, biologics, and clinical infrastructure, strengthening India’s pharmaceutical sector and global leadership.


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