By Maria Kalamatas | The Logistic News – Land Section
New Delhi, India – May 22, 2025
“Our internal market is a force in itself. But if we want to lead, we must outpace on logistics.”
— Vineet Agarwal, Managing Director, Transport Corporation of India
A Supply Chain Realignment in Progress
As geopolitical tensions soften between the U.S. and China, some analysts expected a return to the old trade dynamic. Yet, India is not waiting for equilibrium — it is accelerating its transformation into a logistics powerhouse. In recent public statements, industry leaders have reaffirmed that India remains one of the most attractive destinations for global supply chains in search of resilience and scale.
With a domestic market of over 1.4 billion people and a government actively incentivizing local production, India is no longer seen as a low-cost alternative but as a strategic logistics base in its own right.
Infrastructure Investment and Inland Strategy
The Indian government’s focus on road and rail modernization continues to reshape land transport. Dedicated freight corridors are becoming operational across states, reducing transit time for long-haul cargo by up to 40%. Meanwhile, inland logistics zones are being developed around key industrial clusters to bridge the gap between production and port access.
This momentum is backed by multi-billion-dollar infrastructure commitments under India’s PM Gati Shakti plan, aiming to unify transport data, infrastructure design, and last-mile connectivity into a single national logistics grid.
Competition and Context
Still, the road ahead is competitive. Countries like Vietnam and Thailand are also rising in logistics rankings. Vineet Agarwal noted that for India to truly lead, efficiency must match ambition. That includes smoother cross-border documentation, stronger multimodal integration, and digitization at scale.
The challenge is not just to build — it’s to build better, faster, and with fewer friction points than regional peers.
A Pivot That’s Not Temporary
For many global logistics firms, India is now seen as a permanent part of the diversification strategy, not a temporary hedge. The combination of market size, tech-savvy infrastructure, and political alignment is making India’s logistics ecosystem not just viable, but vital.
As supply chain leaders look toward 2030, few places on the map are commanding as much attention — or capital — as India’s roads and rails.
The Logistic News – Land Section
Focused on infrastructure strategy, land freight transformation, and global logistics realignment.