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India needs a nationwide strategy, not patchwork SEZs

India must move beyond outdated SEZs and embrace a unified, future-ready industrial strategy focused on nationwide competitiveness, regulatory clarity, and long-term, inclusive growth across all states

July 02, 2025 / 09:34 IST
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India has made several attempts to retrofit the SEZ model in order to salvage its utility.

If India harbours ambitions of becoming a credible global industrial power—beyond rhetoric and beyond assembly-line subcontracting—then it must dispense with the logic of exceptionalism. The idea that we can achieve competitiveness through carved-out enclaves like Special Economic Zones (SEZs) is structurally incoherent in the current trade era.

These zones were a product of post-liberalisation anxieties. SEZs were, in fact, relatively new wine in the old bottle of Export Processing Zones (EPZs) that originated in the 1980s, at the peak of the Licence Raj. They appeared as a tactical solution—an attempt to fast-track exports and bypass red tape. But their very existence signalled a quiet admission: that India’s governance architecture was not investment-worthy in its totality, and only exceptions could deliver competitiveness. Imagine a mall owner certifying only one specific outlet in their food court as hygienic.

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Two decades on, that logic has turned on itself. GST has flattened tax structures. While red tape still exists in various forms, India now boasts digital public infrastructure that is globally regarded. New-age policies like PLI (Production-Linked Incentive schemes), DESH (Development of Enterprise and Service Hubs), and PM MITRA are pitched as bold pivots.

In recent years, India has made several attempts to retrofit the SEZ model in order to salvage its utility. Land requirements have been eased, particularly for high-tech sectors like semiconductors and electronics. Operational norms have been relaxed, including permitting encumbered land, counting free-of-cost inputs towards net foreign exchange obligations, and allowing floor-wise de-notification of commercial space.