Impact of Industry 4.0 Technologies on Manufacturing Productivity in India
Impact of Industry 4.0 Technologies on Manufacturing Productivity in India
Authors:
Md. Arsh, Dr. Jayanti Srivastava
Amity Business school, Amity University, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
ABSTRACT
The fourth industrial revolution, commonly referred to as Industry 4.0, marks a profound shift in the way manufacturing systems are conceived, designed, and operated. By weaving together transformative technologies such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), big data analytics, and cyber-physical systems, Industry 4.0 is fundamentally redefining the boundaries of industrial production. In the context of India, where the manufacturing sector serves as a cornerstone of economic development and a vital source of large-scale employment, this technological transition carries considerable significance and considerable complexity.
Despite its strategic importance, Indian manufacturing continues to grapple with persistent challenges including operational inefficiencies, uneven technological adoption across regions and enterprise sizes, and structural productivity gaps that limit its global competitiveness. Against this backdrop, the present study examines the impact of Industry 4.0 technologies on manufacturing productivity in India through a conceptual and exploratory research framework, drawing on secondary data sources and illustrative case-based insights.
The findings suggest that when effectively implemented, Industry 4.0 technologies yield measurable improvements across multiple dimensions of manufacturing performance enhancing operational efficiency, enabling dynamic cost optimization, elevating product quality standards, and empowering real-time, data-driven decision-making. Yet the path to adoption is far from straightforward. Prohibitive implementation costs, a widening skilled workforce deficit, and inadequate digital and physical infrastructure continue to constrain uptake, particularly among the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) that form the backbone of India's industrial ecosystem.
The study concludes that while Industry 4.0 holds genuine transformative potential for Indian manufacturing, realizing this potential demands more than technological investment alone. Enabling conditions including targeted policy interventions, large-scale skill development initiatives, and democratized access to emerging technologies are equally indispensable if the productivity dividends of this revolution are to be equitably and sustainably achieved across India's diverse manufacturing landscape.
Keywords: Industry 4.0, Manufacturing Productivity, Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things, Cyber-Physical Systems, SMEs, Digital Transformation, India