This is an indictment.
Looking up for a scientific Napoleon is putting hope on A prayer.
you need your weakest links to be no less weak than your rivals.... across the whole system, including people resources and technology.
Institutional strength and systemic excellence are the most valuable long term assets any society can possess. Across South Asia namely India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal—institutional capacity exists, but it remains uneven and, in comparative terms, weaker than that of countries that outperform the region on development, governance, and innovation metrics. This is not a problem unique to one state but it is a structural regional constraint.
The region does not suffer from a shortage of talent. On the contrary, human capital quality is often high at the individual level. The constraint lies in institutional ecosystems that fail to consistently identify, nurture, scale, and protect excellence. Weak institutions tend to personalise success rather than systematise it. As a result, breakthrough achievements often depend on exceptional individuals rather than resilient structures.
This explains why transformative progress in strategic sectors has historically required singular figures.
- A. P. J. Abdul Kalam in India’s missile and nuclear efforts,
- Vikram Sarabhai in the early development of India’s space program, and
- Abdul Qadeer Khan in advancing Pakistan’s nuclear capabilities.
These cases illustrate a pattern. when institutions lack embedded excellence, progress becomes personality driven. Individual brilliance compensates for structural deficiencies, but this model is inherently fragile and difficult to replicate at scale.
Most educated observers can outline, in broad terms, the reforms required. Regulatory coherence, meritocratic appointments, insulation from political volatility, long term capital allocation, and accountability mechanisms. However, institutional reform is not merely a technical exercise. It is deeply embedded in political economy, social hierarchies, and historical legacies. That is why transformation proves difficult despite widespread awareness of the shortcomings. HAL is a good example of that. While ISRO is at other end of the spectrum due to leaders they had at an earlier stage. There are many other institutions that fall in either of these categories.
In such an environment, breakthroughs may require either a catalytic leader capable of restructuring incentives and enforcing discipline across systems, or a highly efficient private sector ecosystem.
China has displayed exceptional institutional excellence and harmony which we can’t at thier scale.
Luckily, India has a robust private sector and an ecosystem of suppliers courtesy Tejas, that can take on complex projects. Thats why we have hope in AMCA and many other projects lined up under these companies.