Understanding the Regulatory Landscape in India: A Comprehensive Look at Consumer Sectors (Food Safety and Healthcare)

Understanding the Regulatory Landscape in India: A Comprehensive Look at Consumer Sectors (Food Safety and Healthcare)
Sejal Gupta, Anandini Gupta

Building on our previous working paper on regulatory frameworks across infrastructure and emerging technology sectors, this study shifts its focus to two foundational consumer sectors—food and healthcare—that are central to public welfare, economic resilience, and national development. As these sectors transform rapidly due to demographic shifts, market expansion, and technological change, the paper explores how India’s regulatory landscape is adapting to meet emerging challenges. It analyses existing laws, regulatory bodies, enforcement mechanisms, and gaps while emphasising the need to align regulatory efforts with broader public interest. Global best practices from countries with advanced regulatory systems are also examined to identify lessons relevant to India.

India’s food and beverage (F&B) industry contributes around 3% to the GDP and employs over 7.3 million people. Driven by rising incomes, urbanisation, and growing demand for processed and organic foods, the sector is expanding swiftly. The paper provides a comprehensive overview of the F&B landscape—its regulatory evolution, market drivers, stakeholder roles, and institutional mechanisms. However, the sector faces challenges such as regulatory fragmentation, weak enforcement, and supply chain inefficiencies that affect food safety and standards.

Covering the journey from farm to fork, the paper examines food safety, labelling, cold-chain logistics, quick commerce, cloud kitchens, and informal food systems. Persistent gaps in compliance and coordination continue to impede effective regulation. By comparing India’s regulatory regime with international models like Singapore’s Nutri-Grade labelling and Chile’s front-of-package warnings, the paper highlights the importance of creating a streamlined, consumer-centric framework. Strengthening food safety, harmonising standards, and promoting investment could enable India to become a global hub for food processing and innovation.

The second section analyses India’s healthcare ecosystem, tracing its evolution across public and private systems. It assesses key components—hospitals, pharmaceuticals, diagnostics, insurance, and digital health—while evaluating recent reforms such as Ayushman Bharat, the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM), and Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes. These initiatives have expanded access and innovation but require stronger regulatory coherence and sustained public investment.

The paper underscores the need for regulatory modernisation and better financing mechanisms to achieve equitable, resilient healthcare. It highlights emerging policy priorities, including integrating mental health into primary care, harmonising drug pricing and licensing, and fostering research through initiatives like PRIP and BIRAC. Drawing on global examples such as Japan’s pharmacovigilance system and Australia’s youth mental health model, the paper identifies adaptable best practices for India.

While public health expenditure has risen and out-of-pocket costs have declined, the study argues that deeper reforms are essential—especially in regulation, health education, and equity-focused investment—to align India’s healthcare system with its demographic and epidemiological realities. By advancing regulatory efficiency and fostering innovation, both the food and healthcare sectors can serve as pillars of inclusive growth, public trust, and sustainable national development

Regulatory landscape, food safety, processed foods, healthcare ecosystem, policy interventions