India Could Unlock Up to $7 Billion in Additional Garment Exports by Transforming Its Textile Ecosystem: Vector Consulting Group
The Missing Stitch: India’s Unfinished Garment Export Story launched at Bharat Tex 2026
New Delhi, July 16, 2026: Vector Consulting Group has launched The Missing Stitch: India’s Unfinished Garment Export Story at Bharat Tex 2026, calling for a fundamental shift in how India’s textile ecosystem operates. The white paper argues that transforming fragmented textile and garment manufacturing into a coordinated production ecosystem could unlock an additional $3 billion to $7 billion in garment exports from existing manufacturing capacity.
Based on a survey of senior textile industry executives, the white paper highlights that although India is the world’s second-largest producer of textiles and garments, it accounts for only about 4% of global textiles and garments trade despite supplying a global garments market valued at $1.45 trillion. The study estimates that 35% to 45% of fabric produced by Indian mills is exported without further value addition, representing a significant missed downstream value-addition opportunity.
The report argues that the industry’s weak financial returns are driven less by labour costs, trade agreements or duty structures, and more by the fragmented way fabric manufacturers and garment makers operate. Independent planning, disconnected information flows, and misaligned quality processes create value leakage across the supply chain, increasing costs while limiting sales.
The findings reveal that sewing efficiency across both standalone garment manufacturers and integrated textile companies typically ranges from 58% to 70% of planned levels, while On-Time In-Full (OTIF) performance remains between 60% and 80%, well below the consistently high-90% reliability expected by global garment retailers. To achieve even these service levels, manufacturers often airfreight up to 20% of orders, driving up operating costs and reducing profitability.
To address these challenges, the white paper proposes a production ecosystem model in which fabric manufacturers orchestrate planning, information, quality, inventory and commercial decisions across partner garment manufacturers. By enabling independent firms to operate as a coordinated production ecosystem, sewing efficiency could improve to 80% to 85%, increasing factory operating profits by 80% to 200%. The report estimates that these productivity gains could increase India’s garment exports from $16 billion to $19-23 billion, unlocking $3 billion to $7 billion in additional exports from existing capacity.
Commenting on the findings, P. Senthilkumar, Senior Partner, Vector Consulting Group, said: “India’s textile industry has the capability to compete globally. The opportunity now lies in transforming fragmented operations into a coordinated production ecosystem. Better synchronisation across planning, information, quality and execution can improve productivity, strengthen global competitiveness and unlock significant export growth without creating additional manufacturing capacity.”
Please note: The white paper has been launched during an industry panel discussion at Bharat Tex 2026, where industry leaders will deliberate on the structural changes required to accelerate value addition, improve global competitiveness, and strengthen India’s position in the global garment export market.

