What is Subsidy Incentives?
Historical Background
Key Points
10 points- 1.
A subsidy is essentially a financial advantage conferred by a government that benefits a specific industry, enterprise, or group of enterprises. This advantage can take many forms, such as direct grants, tax exemptions, or preferential loans. The key is that the recipient receives a benefit that they would not have received under normal market conditions. For instance, if the government provides a steel company with electricity at a subsidized rate, that's a subsidy.
- 2.
Subsidies exist to correct market failures. A market failure occurs when the market, on its own, does not allocate resources efficiently. For example, renewable energy might be underproduced because it's more expensive than fossil fuels, even though it's better for the environment. A subsidy can help level the playing field and encourage more renewable energy production. This is why solar power often receives subsidies.
- 3.
Subsidies are often used to promote infant industries. These are new industries that are not yet competitive on a global scale. By providing subsidies, governments hope to give these industries a boost, allowing them to grow and become competitive over time. India's early support for its automobile industry is a good example.
Recent Real-World Examples
1 examplesIllustrated in 1 real-world examples from Feb 2026 to Feb 2026
Source Topic
US imposes 126% tariff on Indian solar products
EconomyUPSC Relevance
Frequently Asked Questions
121. What's the most common MCQ trap regarding subsidies and infrastructure spending?
The most common trap is confusing general government spending on infrastructure with subsidies. Examiners often present a scenario where the government invests in roads or bridges and ask if it qualifies as a subsidy. The correct answer is usually NO, because subsidies must provide a specific, targeted benefit to a particular industry or enterprise, not the entire economy. Infrastructure spending benefits everyone.
Exam Tip
Remember: 'Targeted benefit' is the keyword. If the benefit is widespread, it's likely NOT a subsidy.
2. Why do students often confuse 'actionable' and 'prohibited' subsidies under WTO rules, and what's the key difference?
Students confuse them because both involve trade distortions. The key difference lies in the conditionality. Prohibited subsidies are *contingent* on export performance or the use of domestic goods. Actionable subsidies cause *adverse effects* to other WTO members, such as harming a domestic industry, regardless of export conditions. Prohibited subsidies are automatically illegal, while actionable subsidies can be challenged if proven to cause harm.
