Why
India Must Rethink Governance, Funding, Risk, and Acquisition Capability
India’s
Draft Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2026 is one of the most sophisticated
policy evolutions in the country’s procurement history. It reflects
institutional learning, global benchmarking, and a visible shift in philosophy:
- Indigenous design over
licensed assembly.
- Intellectual property
ownership over mere production.
- Innovation pathways over
vendor rigidity.
- TRL/MRL realism over
aspirational specifications.
- Self-certification and
third-party QA over inspection bottlenecks.
DAP 2026
is not cosmetic reform. It is meaningful progress.
Yet
defence capability outcomes are governed by more than procedures. They are
determined by a deeper layer of institutional design — one that sits beneath
DAP and often constrains its impact.
India now
stands at a critical juncture:
Process
reform has begun. Structural reform must follow.
1. The
Fundamental Limitation: DAP vs Structural Reality
DAP
governs how acquisitions are processed.
But
defence programs operate within a larger system shaped by the General Financial
Rules (GFR), Delegation of Financial Powers Rules (DFPR), Ministry of Finance
controls, audit doctrines, and organisational authority distribution.
This
separation creates friction.
Acquisition
flexibility meets fiscal rigidity.
Milestone logic meets annual budget cycles.
Program urgency meets sanction hierarchies.
The
results are visible:
- Stop–start indigenous programs
- Decision latency
- Vendor cashflow stress
- Cost escalation through delays
DAP
modernises procedures, but structural constraints cap velocity.
2.
Reforming Program Ownership: From Diffusion to Accountability
India’s
acquisition ecosystem remains committee-dominant. Authority is distributed
across stakeholders responsible for requirements, finance concurrence,
technical evaluation, negotiations, and oversight.
While
checks and balances are essential, excessive diffusion creates slower trade-off
decisions, unclear accountability for schedule slippage, and prolonged
consensus cycles.
Global
benchmarks show that complex defence programs benefit from concentrated
authority and accountability.
Suggested
Reform
Creation
of a Defence Capability Program Executive (DCPE) for major programs:
- Own program baseline
- Approve bounded trade-offs
- Certify milestone achievement
- Exercise controlled
flexibility
- Define risk acceptance
thresholds
Ownership
concentration improves decision velocity without removing oversight.
3.
Funding Reform: The Silent Determinant of Capability Timelines
Procedural
efficiency cannot compensate for fiscal instability.
Current
Pain Points
- Annual budget dependency
- Stage-gated releases
- Revalidation uncertainties
These
generate interrupted development cycles, vendor ecosystem instability, and cost
escalation.
Suggested
Reform
Acceptance
of Necessity (AoN)-linked multi-year funding envelopes:
- Total cost ceiling approved
- Funds protected across
financial years
- Phase bands defined
Reforms
must extend into GFR and DFPR provisions to enable:
- Non-lapsable defence program
allocations
- Milestone-based disbursal
Funding
stability is not financial indulgence. It is technological necessity.
4.
Milestone-Based Financial Governance
Technology
development is iterative and non-linear. Yet funding releases remain heavily
tied to procedural stages.
Suggested
Reform
Establishment
of a Defence Technology & Capability Fund (DTCF):
- Non-lapsable structure
- Milestone-triggered disbursal
Safeguards
- Performance-linked releases
- Envelope cap enforcement
- Exit and termination gates
Additionally,
PMU structures must be empowered to:
- Certify milestone completion
- Trigger financial disbursal
workflows
Flexibility
with ceilings preserves fiscal discipline.
5. Risk
Doctrine Reform: Escaping Perfection Paralysis
Implicit
risk minimisation biases delay operational familiarisation, industrial learning
curves, and feedback-driven upgrades.
Modern
defence development follows:
Prototype
→ Limited Series Production → Initial Operational Clearance → Final Operational
Clearance
Suggested
Clause
Indigenous
programs shall operate under a Risk Management Framework enabling:
- Limited Series Production
(LSP)
- Conditional Induction (IOC)
- Spiral Capability Enhancements
Risk
managed early reduces risk later.
6.
Source Selection and Contract Award Reform: Moving Beyond L1 Distortion
Lowest-bidder
dominance can penalise advanced indigenous technology, lifecycle cost
optimisation, and upgrade authority.
Suggested
Reform
Adopt various
Best Value / L1-T1 hybrid evaluation models along the lines of FAR 15 and
FAR 16 based on the risk involved and priority:
📊 Contract Types Comparison:
Benefits, Drawbacks & Risk Allocation
|
Contract
Type / Method |
Best
Use Case |
Benefits |
Drawbacks |
Risk
(Govt vs Vendor) |
|
L1 /
LPTA (FFP) |
Commodities,
spares |
Transparent,
fast, lowest upfront cost |
Poor
quality, no innovation, high lifecycle cost |
⚖️ Medium Govt / Low Vendor |
|
Best
Value Trade-Off (BVTO) |
Complex
platforms |
Optimizes
capability, innovation-friendly |
Needs
strong evaluation capability |
⚖️ Balanced |
|
Weighted
L1 (QCBS) |
Mid-complexity
systems |
Balances
cost & performance |
Scoring
subjectivity |
⚖️ Medium |
|
Cost-Plus
(CPFF/CPIF/CPAF) |
R&D,
prototypes |
Enables
innovation, flexible |
Cost
overruns, weak discipline |
⚠️ High Govt / Low Vendor |
|
Fixed
Price (FFP) |
Mature
production |
Cost
certainty, efficiency |
Vendor
risk premium, quality risk |
⚠️ Low Govt / High Vendor |
|
Fixed
Price Incentive (FPI) |
Transition
phase |
Cost
control + incentives |
Complex
to structure |
⚖️ Shared |
|
Two-Stage
/ Down-Select |
High-tech
programs |
Reduces
technical risk, fosters competition |
High
upfront cost |
⚖️ Medium |
|
Lifecycle
Cost (LCC) Selection |
Long-life
systems |
True
value-for-money |
Data
intensive, forecasting risk |
⚖️ Medium |
|
Strategic
Partnership Model |
Submarines,
aero engines |
Builds
domestic capability |
Higher
short-term cost |
⚠️ Medium Govt |
|
Single Vendor |
Emergency
/ monopoly tech |
Fast,
assured supply |
Expensive,
no competition |
⚠️ High Govt |
|
IDIQ
/ Framework Contracts |
MRO,
spares |
Flexibility,
faster procurement |
Vendor
lock-in risk |
⚖️ Medium |
Capability
is not reducible to purchase price alone.
8.
Program Execution Authority at Working Level
Program
Managers remain constrained by limited authority.
Suggested
Reform
- Budget reallocation thresholds
within approved envelope
- Schedule adjustment authority
within defined limits
This
reduces escalation and improves execution agility.
9.
Trials & Testing Reform: From Sequential to Concurrent
Sequential
trials remain a major contributor to delays.
Suggested
Reform
- Concurrent developmental and
operational trials
- Limited induction trials for
early capability
10.
Testing Infrastructure Expansion
Testing
bottlenecks delay prototypes irrespective of procedural improvements.
Suggested
Reform
- Program-funded testing
infrastructure owned by Armed Forces
- Private and
consortium-operated test ecosystems
11.
Vendor Ecosystem Reform
Financial
turnover filters often exclude deep-technology firms.
Suggested
Reform
- Vendor Development Track
- Capability-based evaluation
over financial size
12.
Contracting Philosophy Modernisation
Rigid
contracts constrain iterative development.
Suggested
Improvements
- Capability block contracts
- Spiral upgrade clauses
- Risk-sharing mechanisms
13.
Lifecycle & Upgrade-Centric Procurement
Modern
systems evolve post-induction.
Suggested
Reform
- Open architecture mandates
- Source code ownership
- Lifecycle cost evaluation
14.
Indigenous Control Metrics
True
self-reliance requires:
- Design authority
- Upgrade authority
- IP ownership
These must
be measurable procurement criteria.
15.
Rapid Capability Channel
Emerging
technologies require faster acquisition pathways.
Suggested
Reform
- Fast-track channel
- AoN to contract within 6–9
months
16.
Digital Vendor Credential Vault
Reduce
repetitive compliance burden.
Suggested
Reform
- Centralised digital vendor
registry
- Reusable certifications
17.
Innovation Fast-Track Scaling
Prototype
success often fails to transition to production.
Suggested
Reform
- Assured limited orders post
successful prototype
This
creates:
- Startup confidence
- Innovation continuity
18.
Acquisition Workforce Professionalisation
Training
programs exist, but a structured certification framework is absent.
Suggested
Reform
Indian
Defence Acquisition Certification Framework:
- Functional specialisations
- Certification levels I, II, III
- Certification-linked
appointments
Program
Manager and DCPE eligibility must be competency-driven just like Program Executive Officers and Program Managaers in DoD, US.
19.
Alignment with Government Financial Rules
DAP
reforms require enabling conditions within:
- GFR
- DFPR
- Delegation of Financial Powers
Needed
provisions:
- Multi-year funding rules
- Milestone disbursal mechanisms
- Delegated authority ceilings
Strategic Implication
Without
structural reform, gains remain incremental.
With this structural
reform in place, expected outcomes:
- 30–40% reduction in testing
timelines
- Increased testing throughput
- Faster prototype-to-induction
cycle
- Reduced cost escalation due to
delays
- Stronger private participation
in defence ecosystem
Final
Reflection
DAP 2026
is a strong and necessary evolution.
But
self-reliance and capability velocity require:
- Authority clarity
- Funding stability
- Risk-managed induction
- Best-value selection
- Contract flexibility
- Testing capacity expansion
- Vendor ecosystem nurturing
- Acquisition workforce
certification
- Financial rule harmonisation
Final
Strategic Thought
In defence
modernisation, time is a capability variable. Delay is a strategic cost.
Structure determines speed.
DAP 2026
lays the runway.
Structural reform determines the take-off.
