By Nagesh Bhushan Chuppala
In recent weeks, a sharp critique in the media has spotlighted a growing malaise in India’s startup ecosystem: patents filed not for protection or commercial value, but for PR. Founders slap “patent pending” or “IP-backed” on pitch decks, only to abandon applications soon after raising funds. Full credit to those calling it out—this vanity filing is real and corrosive. But the uncomfortable truth is that the problem begins far earlier than the provisional patent stage. Indian patents aren’t dying because founders suddenly turn cynical at Series A. Most are stillborn because the ecosystem that produces original, groundbreaking thought is anaemic. We’re trying to harvest fruit without ever planting the trees.
Innovation Isn’t a Switch You Flip at Series A
True innovation—especially the deep-tech, category-creating kind—isn’t a late-stage corporate behaviour. It’s a muscle built painfully early: on school benches, in undergraduate labs, and along PhD corridors. India, however, has long optimised for rankers, not tinkerers; for exams, not experiments; for services, not systems. When curiosity is punished on marksheets and failure is treated as a moral failing, you don’t magically produce first-principles thinkers by age 28.Startups filing patents as window dressing is merely a symptom. The disease runs deeper.
The Structural Cracks
- Education
trains for replication, not exploration
We reward correctness over questioning. A culture that fears being wrong will never produce inventors comfortable reasoning from first principles. - R&D
is institutionally orphaned
Universities rarely incentivise commercially relevant research. Industry largely distrusts academia. The vital bridge between the two is missing, forcing everyone to build in isolated sandpits. - Risk
is socialised as failure
In most Indian households, “try and fail” remains a luxury narrative reserved for motivational posters, not a lived reality. Safe, predictable careers crowd out bold ideas long before anyone considers founding a startup. - Manufacturing
and lab infrastructure lag ambition
You cannot patent what you cannot prototype. Without accessible fabrication facilities, testing infrastructure, and scalable manufacturing, most ideas remain PowerPoint-deep. - Capital
prefers speed over depth
Investors chasing quick revenue naturally favour lightweight business models over slow, capital-intensive science. This bias shapes founder incentives long before the patent office enters the picture.
How India Compares to China and Israel: Lessons from
Innovation Powerhouses
To understand India's challenges, it's instructive to
compare with peers like China and Israel, both of which punch above their
weight in global innovation despite differing scales and contexts. While India
ranks 38th on the Global Innovation Index (GII) 2025, China holds the 10th
spot, and Israel ranks 14th.
These rankings reflect deeper ecosystem differences that
amplify or mitigate the structural cracks outlined above.
- Education
and Talent Pipeline: China's education system has shifted toward STEM
emphasis and practical innovation, producing a massive pool of engineers
and researchers. Israel fosters a "tinkering" culture from early
schooling, with programs encouraging problem-solving and
entrepreneurship—contrasting India's rote-learning focus that stifles
curiosity.
- R&D
Investment and Bridges: Israel leads globally in R&D expenditure
at 6.02% of GDP (2022), far outpacing China's 2.56% and India's 0.65%
(2020). data.worldbank.org
Strong academia-industry ties in Israel, often via military
tech transfers, create seamless bridges. China invests heavily in state-backed
R&D hubs, integrating universities with industry giants like Huawei.
India's orphaned R&D suffers from underfunding and distrust, limiting
commercial translation.
- Risk
Culture: Israel's "Startup Nation" ethos normalizes failure,
bolstered by compulsory military service that builds resilience and tech
skills. China's government subsidies and national priorities reduce
individual risk for innovators. In India, societal pressure toward
stability often kills bold ideas in infancy.
- Infrastructure
and Prototyping: China's world-class manufacturing ecosystem enables
rapid prototyping and scaling, turning ideas into patents. Israel's tech
parks and fab labs provide accessible tools for deep-tech experimentation.
India's gaps in fabrication and testing keep innovations theoretical.
- Capital
and Incentives: Both China and Israel attract patient capital for deep
tech—Israel boasts high VC per capita, while China's state funds fuel
long-term R&D. India's VCs lean toward quick-flip models, reinforcing
superficial IP.
In deep-tech startups, India ranks sixth globally, behind
China (second) and Israel (fourth), highlighting potential but also execution
hurdles. femaleswitch.com
The Data Tells the Same Story
India’s patent filings have surged—over 90,000 in FY24, with
grants hitting a record ~103,000 and a 16.5% growth in applications in 2024. wipo.int
Yet, by volume, it pales against China's 1.8 million
applications in 2024, which account for nearly half the global total. wipo.int
Israel, with a population fraction of India's, focuses on
high-quality filings, often in AI and biotech, contributing to its outsized
impact. India's GII ranking has improved from 81st in 2015 to 38th in 2025, and
it boasts around 4,000 deep-tech startups (sixth globally). femaleswitch.com
But knowledge creation and commercial translation still lag
peers like China, where resident filings dominate and grants surged in
2024.Policies such as the National Deep Tech Startup Policy, tinkering labs
under NEP 2020, and increased funding through ANRF are welcome steps. But they
treat symptoms while the root cause—a broken early-stage pipeline—remains
largely untouched, especially when benchmarked against China's scale and
Israel's intensity.
Building Inventors Starts at Age 12
Innovation is a long game of habit formation. You don’t
create inventors on demo day; you create them:
- At age
12, when asking “why?” is celebrated, not frowned upon.
- At age
19, when labs and hands-on experimentation matter more than lectures.
- At age
25, when pursuing research doesn’t feel like professional exile.
Until we fix the pipeline that shapes minds from school
onward—rewarding curiosity, normalising failure, bridging academia and
industry, and building real prototyping infrastructure—patents will continue
arriving dressed for a party that never truly begins. Learning from China’s
investment scale and Israel’s cultural agility could accelerate this
transformation. India has the talent. What it needs is the soil, sunlight, and
patience to grow ideas that endure. Only then will our patents stop being
stillborn and start changing the world.
Sowing for Tomorrow
Policies like the National Deep Tech Startup Policy and NEP’s tinkering labs are seeds of change. Yet without uprooting rote culture, bridging silos and embracing failure, they risk withering. Emulate China’s scale and Israel’s agility: invest boldly in education, normalise risk and build fabs. India has the talent—a diaspora powering Silicon Valley attests. Provide the soil, and patents might finally thrive, not just dress for the party.
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