In the past, costly equipment like fighter planes, tanks and missiles were crucial to military might. Advanced missile systems cost millions per unit, while a single modern fighter jet can cost more than USD 80 million. In contrast, drones are revolutionary due to their economic influence as well as their technological capabilities. They are cheap to create, yet can do disproportionate damage.
The 100:1 War
This cost advantage allows small governments or even non-state organisations, to employ aerial strike capabilities that were earlier exclusive to large countries. Defence economists refer to the outcome as the democratisation of lethality. The framework of conflict is profoundly altered when destructive capability becomes affordable and available.
The cost disparity between drones and the devices employed to intercept them is one of the most notable economic aspects of drone warfare. Expensive air defence missiles are frequently needed to protect against low-cost drones. For instance, a missile that costs USD 3 million or more may intercept a drone that costs about USD 30,000. As a result, the defender expends significantly more resources than the attacker, resulting in a cost-exchange ratio of about 100 to 1. Warfare becomes an economic struggle of endurance as a result of this asymmetry.
Drone war economy
The conflict between Russia and Ukraine illustrates the dramatic cost asymmetry shaping modern warfare. Battlefield economics have been transformed by the widespread use of low-cost First -Person View (FPV) drones to destroy armoured vehicles worth millions. A USD 5 million tank destroyed by a USD 5000 drone represents a striking shift in cost effectiveness. In such conditions, the side that can manufacture drones faster and cheaper gains a decisive strategic advantage.
Drone warfare has also created a new global defence industry. Countries including the United States, China, Iran and Turkey now produce and export unmanned systems. Turkey’s Bayraktar TB2 drones have been widely used in conflicts across eastern Europe and the Caucasus, while Iranian-designed drones have appeared in multiple battle zones, underscoring the rapid global diffusion of this technology.
Balancing the Drone Equation
Drone manufacturing is driven by strong financial incentives. Built with commercial electronics and modular components, drones are far cheaper to produce than traditional military hardware, enabling rapid scaling. This has encouraged innovation and deeper participation from the commercial sector. As governments increase investment in unmanned systems, the global military drone market is projected to reach USD 18 billion and to nearly double over the next decade.
These financial advantages also create new challenges. Their low cost makes it difficult to regulate through traditional arms-control frameworks. Commercial drones can be purchased or modified by militias and non-state actors, blurring the line between civilian and military technology and raising concerns about misuse and proliferation. At the same time, the cost gap between drones and interceptors is forcing countries to rethink defence strategies. Many are investing in directed-energy weapons, electronic warfare and low-cost interceptor drones to restore balance and reduce the cost of countering drone attacks.
For developing nations like India, the drone revolution brings opportunity and risk. Domestic drone manufacturing can strengthen defence and high-tech industry, but rising proliferation demands robust counter-drone systems and regulation. Modern warfare is shifting from costly platforms to adaptive, low-cost systems where production capacity and affordability increasingly shape strategic outcomes.
The author is Senior Assistant Professor in Economics, Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College
